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The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
Contents
Section 1 About usOur aims 2History of the Bar Association 2Bar Association office bearers 3Bar Association staff 4Membership statistics 5Practitioner statistics 6
Section 2 The year in reviewPresident’s report 7Executive Director’s report 9
Section 3 AppointmentsCommittees of the Bar Association 13Sections of the Bar Association 16New South Wales members appointed to the Bench 16Bar Association representatives on educational bodies 17Court committees and working parties 17Statutory appointments 18Other appointments 19Court liaison members 2003 19
Section 4 ReportsPromoting the interests of practising barristers
BarCare 20Barristers’ Benevolent Association 21Contributors to the Barristers’ Benevolent Fund of New South Wales 22Equal Opportunity Committee 25Bar History Committee 27Professional Standards Committee 28
Arranging and promoting continuing professional developmentEducation, training and professional development programmes 29
Making recommendations and promoting the administration of justice
Family Law Committee 32Criminal Law Committee 33Personal Injuries Litigation Committee 33Legal Aid Committee 34Mediation Committee 35Professional Indemnity Insurance Committee 36Bar Association Human Rights Coordinator 36
Promoting access to justiceLegal Assistance Referral Scheme 37LawAccess NSW 39Legal Assistance Referral Scheme statistics 40
Questions as to professional conductProfessional Conduct Department 42Professional conduct statistics 47
Section 5 Financial statementsNew South Wales Bar Association financial statements 49Barristers’ Benevolent Association of New South Wales 68The Barristers’ Superannuation Fund 75
About us The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
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Aims
The New South Wales Bar Association is a voluntary association of practisingbarristers. Our aims, as expressed in our Constitution, include:
• to promote the administration of justice;
• to promote, maintain and improve the interests and standards of practisingbarristers;
• to make recommendations with respect to legislation, law reform, rules of courtand the business and procedure of courts;
• to seek to ensure that the benefits of the administration of justice are reasonablyand equally available to all members of the community;
• to arrange and promote continuing professional development;
• to promote fair and honourable practice amongst barristers;
• to suppress, discourage and prevent malpractice and professional misconduct;
• to inquire into questions as to professional conduct and etiquette of barristers;
• to confer and cooperate with bodies in Australia or elsewhere representing theprofession of the law;
• to encourage professional, educational, cultural and social relations amongst themembers of the Bar Association; and
• to make donations to charities and such other objects in the public interest asdetermined from time to time by the Bar Council.
History of the Bar AssociationIn July 1896 an association of barristers was formed in New South Wales to
consider and report upon all matters of current legislation, enunciate and enforcerules of professional discipline and to foster social and professional liaison amongstthe members of the Bar.
On 9 June 1902 the old association was dissolved and the first annual meeting ofa new body took place. It was called the Council of the Bar of New South Wales.
On 22 October 1936 the New South Wales Bar Association was incorporated andin the first meeting of the Council of the New South Wales Bar Association tookplace. The Memorandum and Articles of Association noted that the Bar Associationwould make suggestions on legislation, court rules, procedure and business. Thememorandum also noted that a library would be established together with reading,meeting, and dining rooms, and power to undertake law reporting, printing,publishing and bookbinding.
Over the years, both the judicial and executive branches of government sought theadvice of the Bar Association regarding Bills and Rules of Court. By 1960 the numberbeing sent to the Bar Association had increased markedly. In 1962 the associationformed a standing Law Reform Committee to deal with the increased workload. By1968 there were 14 standing committees of the Bar Association including the Ethics,Finance, Fees, Accommodation, Liaison with the Law Society, Bar History, LawReform, Continuing Legal Studies, Barristers’ Benevolent Association, Reading,Membership, Listing, Library and Housing committees.
In 2003 there were 17 standing committees. A considerable number of barristersare appointed as members of court liaison committees, government working partiesand statutory authorities, providing their skills and expertise for the public benefit.
Thirty two presidents and one hundred Bar councils later, the association hasgrown from strength to strength. In 1961 Bowen QC, then president of the BarAssociation commented:
The Bar as a community has entered upon a period unlike anythingexperienced before...We have not been afraid to speak out, if need bepublicly, on matters of general concern on which the community might fairlylook to the Bar as an experienced professional body for guidance.
The statement remains true today.
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Bar Association office bearersAs at 30 June 2003
Bar Council, Back row, left to right:Kate Traill, Dominic Toomey, Michael McHugh, Anna Katzmann SC, John Fernon,
Stuart Torrington, Hugh Marshall, Larry King SC, Geoff Lindsay SC, Robert Toner SC,
Richard Cavanagh, James Stevenson
Front row, left to right:Andrew Bell, Virginia Lydiard, Tom Bathurst QC, Ian Harrison SC, Bret Walker SC,
Michael Slattery QC, Chrissa Loukas, Philip Selth, Bernie Coles QC, Hayden Kelly
Bar Council Executive left to right:Tom Bathurst QC (Treasurer),
Ian Harrison SC
(Senior Vice President),
Bret Walker SC (President),
Michael Slattery QC
(Junior Vice President),
Chrissa Loukas (Secretary),
Philip Selth
(Executive Director)
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Office of the Executive DirectorExecutive DirectorPhilip Selth BA (Hons) LLB
Executive AssistantKathy O’Neill
Projects OfficerKim Nichols LLB
Administration DepartmentAdministrative ServicesManagerAnita McInally LLB
Administrative Officer(Records)Kim Ellis
Reception OfficerBarbara Coorey
Administrative OfficerPatrina Malouf
Administrative Officer(Facilities and Events)Travis Drummond
Bar ManagerTony Mitchell
IT ConsultantsDarren Covell
Matthew Vickers
LibraryLibrarianLisa Allen B App Sc(Info) M InfStud
Assistant LibrarianJennifer Hughes BA DIM
Technical Services LibrarianLeanne Drew MA
Library TechnicianJeanine Metcalf BA
Finance DepartmentFinance ManagerBasil Catsaros B Comm ACA
Deputy Finance ManagerTess Santos B Sc (Bus Admin)
Certification OfficerBarrie Anthony JP
Legal Assistance Referral SchemeLegal Assistance ManagerHeather Sare
Administrative AssistantJulia Sharp
Professional Conduct DepartmentDirector, ProfessionalConductAnne Sinclair BA MLM
Deputy Director,Professional ConductHelen Barrett LLB
Deputy Director,Professional ConductAdele Connor BA LLB MPS
Assistant to the Director,Professional ConductLorraine Haycock
AssistantBarbara Stahl
AssistantDenisha Govender
Professional DevelopmentDepartment
Director of StudiesRobert Hayes LLB PhD
Deputy Director of StudiesChris D’Aeth LLB (Hons) MBA
Education OfficerMeagan Phillips
Education AssistantIrene Puntillo
Public AffairsPublic Affairs OfficerChris Winslow BA (Hons) DIM
Bar Association staffAs at 30 June 2003
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StatisticsAs at 30 June 2003
The New South Wales Bar Association is a voluntaryAssociation of practising barristers. Being a member of theBar Association and holding a NSW barrister’s practisingcertificate are distinctly separate. The following is astatistical profile of both membership of the BarAssociation and barristers who hold a NSW practisingcertificate.
Membership statisticsThere are 2565 members of the New South Wales BarAssociation.
Ordinary membersClass A and B(i)* holding NSW practising certificates (including members based interstate & overseas andlife members who have a current NSW PC)
Male 1799
Female 284
Total 2083
Number of senior counsel (QC or SC)†:
Male 287
Female 7
Total 294
Number of ‘junior’ barristers‡
Male 1512
Female 277
Total 1789
†Senior counsel (QC and SC) are commonly, called ‘silks’. SCs have beenappointed since 1993 and replaced the appointment of Queen’s Counsel. ‡ The term ‘junior’ barrister means all barristers except those who have beenappointed senior counsel (QC or SC). A junior barrister does not necessarilyindicate the ability or number of years at the Bar; for example, some ‘juniors’have been practising for 30 years.
* For membership details, see Clause 4 of the Constitution of the New SouthWales Bar Association, 1 January 2000
Practising address of ordinary membersClass A and B(i)
New South Wales 1918
Victoria 3
ACT 36
Queensland 96
South Australia 6
Western Australia 4
Northern Territory 1
Tasmania 0
Overseas 19
Total 2083
Number of honorary life members & ordinary membersClass B(ii) and B(iii)* (including members interstate & overseas)
Male: 409
Female: 73
Total 482(Includes 26 honorary life members who do not have a current NSW PC)
* For membership details, see Clause 4 of the Constitution of the New South
Wales Bar Association, 1 January 2000
Occupation of ordinary members Class B(ii) and B(iii)
Judge 161
Magistrate 11
Statutory/government officer 2
Judicial officers 11
Member of parliament 0
Academic (non practising) 14
Interstate barrister 94
Overseas barrister 2
Former barrister 107
Former judge 71
Law student 1
Miscellaneous 8
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Practitioner statistics
Practitioners holding NSW practising certificates(including practitioners based interstate & overseas)
Male 1842
Female 287
Total 2129
Number of practitioners who are senior counsel (QC or SC)
Male 290
Female 7
Total senior counsel 297
Number of junior barristers
Male 1552
Female 280
Total junior barristers 1832
Practitioners holding NSW practising certificatesBy location
Juniors Silks Total
Male Female Male Female
New South Wales 1411 265 255 6 1937
ACT 30 5 4 0 39
Victoria 3 0 0 0 3
Queensland 89 7 21 0 117
South Australia 3 1 2 0 6
Western Australia 4 0 0 0 4
Northern Territory 1 0 0 0 1
Tasmania 0 0 0 0 0
Overseas 11 2 8 1 22
Overseas practitioners by country of residenceJuniors Silks Total
Male Female Male Female
USA 2 2
UK 2 1 5 1 9
Hong Kong 0 0 3 0 3
New Zealand 5 1 0 0 6
Fiji 1 0 0 0 1
Vanuatu 1 0 0 0 1
Total 22
The year past had its peculiarities so far as the BarAssociation’s tasks were concerned. Some were familiar,others were unprecedented. Only too familiar was thequadrennial law-and-order auction before the election of stateparliament. Gratifyingly, the public interests suffered lessthan may have been feared, and a very considerable scope forproper judicial discretion in sentencing was preserved. Onbehalf of the members of the Bar Association, I record ourappreciation for those members of council and committees whoassisted in attending those political bushfires. And we shouldalso appreciate the continued willingness of government andopposition party representatives to receive our deputationsand arguments.
The shock of 11 September 2001 has been followed by thepains of arguing against ill-directed or excessive diminution ofpresent liberties as part of the so-called ‘War on Terror’. TheBar Association has been prominent, both individually and aspart of the team constituting the Law Council of Australiaeffort, in proposing improvements to both major politicalparties’ draft legislation designed to permit and regulate thevirtually unprecedented detention of non-suspect possibleinformers. This has been, I think, one of the most importantoccasions for our public-spirited participation inparliamentary government. Although many people - not justlawyers - are unhappy with the resultant legislation, it iscertain that it could have been a lot worse. Striking thebalance between liberty and laxness is less easy than manyapparently suppose. I hope there will be very few occasions inthe future for the Bar to confront these kinds of issues. In thepresent context, I suspect that our professional involvement asadvocates on one side or other is the next stage.
In that connexion, I can report that, thanks to the goodoffices of the Secretary of the Commonwealth Attorney-General’s Department, Mr Robert Cornall, the Bar Associationis being kept informed and has the opportunity to contribute tothe devising of safeguards in relation to national securityinformation and the clearance of counsel involved in terrorismcriminal proceedings. This is a very vexed area, and is beingclosely monitored by the Australian Bar Association. TheAustralian Law Reform Commission is working on a referencedirectly related to this topic. Legal aid conditions alreadyrequire clearances. The potential for prejudice to defences,and also to appropriate prosecution charges, looms large in ourconsiderations. As an issue, it will continue for quite some timeto come.
One could safely estimate that members of the BarAssociation have as many different views on the merits ofintervention in Iraq as there are in society generally. The BarAssociation confined its efforts to matters of legality, andsought to be no more than a forum for the different andsometimes hotly opposed views. I hope we will continue toprovide a civil, thorough and unafraid setting in which legalissues important to society can be examined. One questionraised, not for the first time, in this regard was the extent towhich asserted government reliance on legal advice rendered itappropriate for the terms of that advice to be made public. Inthe event, publication ensued - but the merit of seeking itsrelease remained an open question, upon which, I know,reasonable minds do differ. In my personal view, it is in theinterests of a representative democracy attached to the rule oflaw that the government of the day should feel comfortable andrelaxed about sharing with the people the legal reasoning uponwhich it justifies the lawfulness of its conduct affecting them.
No-one on the Bar Council was complacent about theintroduction of continuing professional development on acompulsory basis now enshrined in standard conditions
imposed on our local practising certificates. Our experienceof its first full year’s operation is, on the whole, a solid basisfor optimism. I wish to pay tribute to Dr Robert Hayes, ourDirector of Studies, and his inestimable staff, for thisachievement. They have managed to set themselves a highstandard to emulate in the years to come. It is clear to methat the major rationales for this radical change of policy,none of which apparently occurred to the Editor of theAustralian Law Journal (77 ALJ 204 -205), remain good, andeven more so in the present insurance and liability climate.Underwriters require demonstration of steps towards riskmanagement somewhat beyond a protestation of being alearned profession and a repetition of platitudes concerningvoluntary diligence. Taking advantage of statutory schemesto cap liability, whether under the current ProfessionalStandards Act 1994 or the hoped-for national improvement ofthat scheme, unquestionably mandates a compulsory scheme.And, by way of riposte to the same editor in his judicial role,one proper response by an organised profession to perennialjudicial regrets about declining standards of advocacy is totake them sufficiently seriously as to try something new in theway of professional inculcation of skills and awareness. Ihope the ambition that CPD will enhance the real content ofour mutual description as ‘learned friends’ will prove to bemore than a slogan.
I am pleased to acknowledge the generous efforts of BrianRayment QC in co-ordinating our very important preparationto gain approval of a scheme to grant New South Walesbarristers these limitations, or cap, on our liability forprofessional negligence. An outstanding issue remains thecurrent anomalous statutory exclusion of that possibility withrespect to liability stemming from personal injury claims.
Insurance has now become a critical annual exercise. It isimpossible to overstate the debt we all owe to Tony Meagher SCfor his masterly efforts as our shepherd (and, perhaps,sheepdog for the underwriters) in a savagely cyclical market.There are other ways apart from encouraging severalcompetitors in this market, such as that attempted in Victoria.So far, from the point of view of timely availability, choice andprice levels, as well as approved terms, the New South Walesapproach is probably the most successful. This is a diffidentand relative statement, given the sky-rocketing of premiumsand the extreme tightening of availability of cover at the higherlevels of indemnity. But the Bar in New South Wales has,believe it or not, suffered less than quite a few otherprofessional indemnity sectors.
The capacity of the New South Wales Bar to influence,however slightly in absolute terms, its own destiny in the matterof its professional indemnity insurance is just one aspect of theadvantages, and virtues, of the self-governance element in theNew South Wales mixed model for the regulation of the legalprofession. Significantly, a comprehensive review in Victoriawill probably produce a near approach to the principalfeatures of the balance between external and internalgovernance and discipline of the profession under the currentversion of the Legal Profession Act 1987. I was pleased to meetwith the Hon Rob Hulls MP, the Attorney-General for Victoria,during his consideration of those changes.
This essential federal approach must continue. I do notmean the composition (or division) of our country intoconstituent states (with the territories as a quirky addition).Rather, I mean sensibly local and functional groupings of thepractising legal profession, rather than as a job-lot in onemassive national association. The historic moves - the closestapproach yet to success - towards a national legal professionhave been successful, in my view, precisely because the
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President’s report
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profession has (I hope) persuaded governments not to attemptthe Quixotic end of exactly uniform nation-wide legislationgoverning every aspect of all lawyers’ practices. Rather,generous scope should be preserved for local people (lawyers,voters and governments) to adjust to local conditions. Ametaphor I repeatedly used in representing the Bar Associationin this project was that our sole aim should be to flatten allbumps in the road. The road is the one that we tread intravelling around Australia to practise law. Gradually, sincethe Blueprint for a national legal service market was releasedby the Law Council of Australia in the mid 1990s, we (ieAustralian lawyers, rather than Australian governments) havecarried the project of persuading state governments, one byone, that full faith and credit should be given by each of themfor all the others’ admission of legal practitioners. There is, ofcourse, much more troublesome detail to be addressed,especially for solicitors with fidelity funds and trust accounts,but the work is mostly done. I commend in particular theculminating efforts of Ron Heinrich as President of the LawCouncil of Australia in fostering what in my experience werethe most co-operative and least divided sessions of discussionamongst representatives of the national profession that I haveever been privileged to observe.
On the other hand, the New South Wales Bar - and, I strongly believe, all the Bars - should adamantly oppose anyattempt to de-federalise the legal profession by any move tocentralising registration, admission, discipline, education orany other aspect of regulation in Canberra, or in one bodyvainly homogenising all Australian private practitioners. Thefact is that legal practices, in business structure, style and evenaspirational ideals, are diverging rather than converging. Themercantilism of the largest solicitors’ firms much more closelyresembles that of their cousin merchant banks and ‘businessservices’ (i.e. accounting) firms than it does the local andpersonal service roles of suburban practitioners or countryfirms. And, I believe, practically all serious litigators, bywhich I mean solicitors engaged in litigation, have much morein common with the Bar than with a number of other segmentsof solicitors’ practice when it comes to the daily ministering tojustice, in its distinct pervasive ethical element manifest inpractical action.
My experience of a decade involved in rule making for theprofession leads me to the tentative view that any move towardscentralisation would be a disaster. It would reduce desirableflexibility. There would be no competitive federalism, with itsuseful experiments. The least co-operative, the mostconservative or the heavily moneyed components of theprofession would dictate rates and directions of change. Theadministration of justice could not possibly be the first priorityof a massive body most of whose members never appear incourt and rarely instruct as an officer of the court.
Ironically, in my view the best antidote to what may be athreat of a centralising ambition on the part of some involvedin the Law Council of Australia, or even the Commonwealthgovernment, is to press with vigour for the admission into theLaw Council of Australia of even more voices representingdifferent segments of the legal profession. It is probably apipedream to consider the judiciary as one of those segments.But it is entirely practical to count in each and every Bar in thecountry, as soon as they wish to be included. As a matter ofprinciple, I would regard the Australian Corporate LawyersAssociation as a natural and very deserving recipient ofanother seat at the table. Appropriate bodies representing lawteachers and scholars, and perhaps government lawyers aswell, also deserve immediate consideration. We are allAustralian lawyers. The Law Council of Australia cannot
afford for long to proceed as if the number of our colleaguespractising as private solicitors suffices to characterise itspolitical composition and its agenda.
An intensely important issue for the Bar Association locallywill arrive next July, when the fee for membership is likely to beconsiderably higher than the $2.20 we all presently pay. Toreflect the observance of national competition policy, practisingcertificate fees will, by and large, be restricted to a form of cost-recovery in relation to those activities and facilities presentlyprovided by the Bar Association which are, so to speak, in thepublic interest as opposed to for the private benefit of members.The calculation of various heads of expenditure is beingnegotiated with government. membership of the Bar Associationhas always been voluntary, but since the introduction ofpractising certificates in 1987 the revenue of the association haslargely been underwritten by statutory compulsion. It will be atesting time for the next Bar Council, and I fervently hope thatmembers of the Bar will continue to have good reason to considerthat, precisely because they are members of the Bar, they willalso be members of the Bar Association.
It will probably be one of my last missions as a member of theBar Council to report back in October on the threats orchallenges (according to taste) posed to the Bar by competitionregulators, as assessed by the predicaments presently faced byour cousin Bars in England and Wales, Scotland and theRepublic of Ireland. There is no doubt that the regulatorsthemselves share intelligence. We should too. We have done sowith some success nationally in the face of what might bedescribed as a chronic curiosity evinced by the AustralianCompetition and Consumer Commission over the last decade orso. Believe it or not, the matter continues. It does appear thatthe only issue for the New South Wales Bar is what isunaccountably regarded as our quaint attachment to the sole-practitioner rule. My mantra against such barbarism is that itcannot be anti-competitive to forbid the combination ofcompetitors. And no-one seriously suggests that combines (greator small) of barristers will harness such greater resources thanwe are severally capable of employing as to promise animprovement in advocacy and related advisory skills offered tothe public, were the sole-practitioner rule removed. In thisstate, holders of a practising certificate ‘as a solicitor andbarrister’ can compete with us in everything we do, wherebypractitioners minded to operate in combines or as employeeswith respect to their services as advocates may do so withcomplete freedom of choice. I only regret that I cannot report toyou all now that this controversy has passed into legal history.
The Bar Council is, as always, honoured to be entrusted bythe members of the Bar Association with its governance. TheExecutive appreciates the trust reposed in it, and I am gratefulfor the opportunity to serve as President. The efforts of theelected officers, however, would be futile without the twocardinal resources of the association. First, the volunteers oncommittees, working parties and ad-hoc projects are many innumber and quite central to the profession’s deserving the nameof a profession. Second, the entire staff but particularly itsexecutives under Philip Selth deserve the repeated accolades ofmy predecessors and me. Members of the Bar Associationdirectly and the public interest focused on the courts,parliament and executive government indirectly, are greatly inthe debt of our staff’s calm, intelligent and energetic work.
BW WalkerPresident
President’s report - continued
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Executive Director’s report
In my report for 2001-2002 I outlined some of the workundertaken in that year by the Bar Association in respect ofone of the most important objects in its Constitution (cl.3.1.3), ‘to make recommendations with respect tolegislation, law reform, Rules of Court and the business andprocedure of courts’. In 2002 - 2003 the Bar Associationagain devoted many hundreds of hours to this object. Someof that work is noted elsewhere in this annual report.However, three projects which are of immediate - and direct- relevance to the legal profession warrant separate notice.
These projects are:
• the national practice model laws project;
• proposed changes to the way in which the Bar Council(and the Council of the Law Society of New South Wales)are involved in the investigation of taxation and other‘notifiable’ offences (Part 3, Division 1AA and Part 10 ofthe Legal Profession Act 1987); and
• proposed amendments to the Legal Profession Act 1987and the Legal Profession Regulation 2002 to ‘tidy up’this legislation.
The national practice model laws projectSince the mid 1990s the Law Council of Australia, of
which the Bar Association is a constituent body, has beenworking towards removing ‘bumps in the road’ that are animpediment to practitioners practising across Australia,unhindered by a raft of unnecessary statutory andadministrative procedures that differ in each state andterritory. It has been the legal profession, and in particularthe Law Council (including under Walker SC’s presidencyin 1997 - 1998) that has led the way in these reforms.Unfortunately, some politicians and elements of the mediaseem to be unaware or have forgotten this fact.
In 1994 the fundamental tenet of the Law Council’sBlueprint for a national legal services market was that a lawyer admitted to practice in any state or territoryshould be able to practise law throughout Australia withoutany further restrictions. The NLSM Blueprint was a directresponse to the decision by the Council of AustralianGovernments in February 1994 to develop detailedproposals for the reform of the legal profession ‘with theobjective of removing constraints on the development of a national market in legal services and developing otherefficiency-enhancing reforms’. The travelling practisingcertificate that now operates in all states and territoriesother than Western Australia and Queensland (where legislation has been promised) grew out of theNLSM Blueprint.
In October 2001 the Law Council put its Towardsnational practice submission to the Standing Committee of[federal and state] Attorneys-General (SCAG). Thissubmission pressed for full implementation of the NLSMBlueprint, the removal of barriers to national practice inareas such as professional indemnity insurance and fidelityfunds, uniform cost disclosure requirements, and acooperative approach between states and territories to theregulation of the legal profession to allow a viable nationalpractising certificate regime
The matter of a ‘national legal profession’ had been onSCAG’s agenda for some time. (New South Wales hadalready made major moves in this direction by the reformsenacted in the Legal Profession Act 1987, which commencedin 1988.) In early 2002 SCAG tasked officers to producevarious papers on aspects of achieving a fully functioningregulatory regime for national legal practice. The LawCouncil established expert working groups to work with theSCAG officers. Senior Bar Association staff were appointedto the groups considering ‘Admission of local legalpractitioners’; ‘Legal practice: Australian lawyers’;‘Complaints and discipline’; and ‘Legal profession rules’.The President was a prominent member of the LawCouncil’s reference group that painstakingly reviewed thevarious reports on which the working parties expended somuch time and effort.
A significant problem that had to be overcome was theenthusiasm of some SCAG officers, unhampered by nothaving practised or been directly involved in theadministration of the relevant legislation, to produce anextraordinarily prescriptive ‘one size fits all’ Bill thatregulated in the finest detail every conceivable aspect of the work and regulation of the Australian legal profession.This guaranteed the project would fail - and, ironically,provide mountains of work for the profession for years to come sorting out the inevitable litigation nightmare that would follow should the prescriptive approach beadopted by SCAG. The President, Senior Vice Presidentand senior members of the Bar Association spent manyhours seeking to persuade the State Attorney General, the Secretary to SCAG (the Director-General of the NSWAttorney General’s Department), the legislative draftsmanand Commonwealth officers of the futility of thisprescriptive approach. (The Law Council and other Barsand law societies, too, made submissions to relevant personson this issue.)
Fortunately, sanity eventually prevailed. It becameaccepted that regulation of the legal profession is astate/territory responsibility and that the state supremecourts have and should continue to retain their inherentsupervisory role over the practise of the law. The position ofstate and territory governments to set the regulatory regimeapplying in their jurisdiction remains. The project is notaimed (as some apparently wished) at ‘nationalising’regulation of the legal profession in a way that the nationalcompanies scheme saw the enactment of the CorporationsAct and the creation of the national regulatory bodies whichaccompany that scheme. Rather, it is intended that theproject produce harmonised outcomes and the minimisationof barriers which can result from separate state regulations.An important concept is that self-regulation of the legalprofession remains an important element of the overallregulatory mix
Some hundreds of hours later, and after an interminablenumber of telephone and face to face conferences, the LawCouncil and its constituent bodies, and SCAG officers,produced a hefty draft Bill and comment for theconsideration of SCAG at its August 2003 meeting. At thatmeeting SCAG agreed to endorse the proposed model
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provisions as a basis for consistent laws to facilitate a trulynational profession. The Law Council, and so the BarAssociation, will be consulted in the finalisation of themodel legislation.
A giant step towards the harmonisation and consistencyin the national regulation of the Australian legal professionhas been made.
Part 3, Division 1AA (Special powers in relation topractising certificates) and Part 10 (Complaints anddiscipline) of the Legal Profession Act 1987
Since their enactment nearly two years ago, the BarCouncil has had concerns about the provisions in the LegalProfession Act 1987 (Part 3, Division 1AA) which govern thecancellation and suspension of, refusal to issue, andattachment of conditions to, a practitioner’s practisingcertificate following the notification by the practitioner thathe or she has committed an indictable or tax offence, or anact of bankruptcy. Accordingly, in October 2002, after thePresident had discussed the issue with the Attorney General,the Bar Council put a submission to the Attorney Generalproposing that the Part 3 regime be brought more into linewith that of Part 10. Discussions with the Attorney General,Legal Services Commissioner and the Law Society followed.
In April the Bar Council put a revised submission to theAttorney General proposing legislative ‘cures’ to operatingunder Part 3, Division 1AA of the Legal Profession Act.This submission was supported by the Law Society and, forthe most part, the Legal Services Commissioner.
The submission set out the objectives of the proposal as being:
• To give appropriate primacy to a council’s originaldecision to cancel a practising certificate while
preserving a limited right of appeal (not on a de novobasis) and maintain the Legal ServicesCommissioner’s monitoring role.
• Retain the powers of the councils to grant the‘licences’ to practitioners, i.e. issue and cancelpractising certificates in relation to its investigationswhich arise out of notifiable events.
• Empower the councils with coercive powers (as is thecase for Part 10 matters) to obtain information duringtheir investigations, together with effective sanctionsfor non compliance. This will go some way towardsensuring that the council is equipped with suchinformation and material as is available prior tomaking its decision.
• Eliminate the Supreme Court’s confusing distinctionbetween the operation of secs 38FC and 38FE of theLegal Profession Act 1987.
• Protect the public interest by having challenges to the suspension or cancellation of practisingcertificates determined in a timely, transparent andcost effective manner.
• Avoid matters being litigated in the Supreme Court atgreat expense to the Public Purpose Fund andestablish just, quick and cheap ‘review’ typeprocedures of the tribunal.
• Give the Administrative Decisions Tribunal theprimary review of council decisions but retain theLegal Service Commissioner’s current power to takeover determinations.
• Shift the onus in any appeal in the tribunal to beborne by the practitioner.
• Empower the councils to impose conditions withoutthe consent of the legal practitioner if it is in thepublic interest to do so.
• Empower the tribunal to imposeconditions after seeking submissions onthose conditions from the relevantcouncil, given that the council will have to monitor those conditions.
The practical consequences of theproposed new regime would be:
• Reduced cost, as there will no longer be
(a) expensive applications for interlocutoryrelief;
(b) de novo appeals before the Court ofAppeal; and
(c) Senior and junior counsel routinelyappearing at such lengthy appeals.
• Effective implementation of the intentionof the legislation - i.e. efficient, simpleand clean process of dealing withnotifiable events for the purpose ofprotecting the public.
Executive Director’s report - continued
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The year in review The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
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• Minimise the perception that the ‘club’ is adjudicatingits own whilst at the same time increase the perception ofindependent third parties providing a transparentregulation of the profession.
The Attorney General, while in discussion indicating hisgeneral support for the thrust of this submission, had at theend of the reporting year yet to determine his position onthe proposed new regime.
Miscellaneous amendments to the Legal Profession Act1987 and Legal Profession Regulation 2000
The legislation that governs the practice of law in NewSouth Wales must be one of the most reviewed - andamended - in Australia. In 2001 the Law ReformCommission published its Report 99, Complaints againstlawyers: An interim report. That report led the AttorneyGeneral to direct his department to undertake anotherinquiry, the results of which were published in November2002, A further review of complaints against lawyers. Inaddition to the submissions made to these two inquiries, theBar Association, Law Society and the Legal ServicesCommissioner had over several years sought a raft ofamendments to the Act and Regulation. The AttorneyGeneral’s Department, too, was also seeking amendments.The Bar Council was also concerned that the department’spublic report did not accurately reflect the association’sposition on a range of issues.
Some of the requested amendments overlapped. Theneed for some was urgent. There was no unanimity of viewon all issues. The national practice model laws projectmeant some changes to the NSW legislation would need tobe considered. While the Attorney General had agreed tolegislation in respect of some of the proposals, for variousreasons that legislation had not been introduced into theparliament. The department’s priorities were such that itsofficers were unable to give the attention to the variousreports and submissions that the Bar Council thought wasnecessary. Accordingly, the President proposed to theAttorney General that the Bar Association convene aworking party comprising representatives of the BarAssociation, Law Society, Office of the Legal ServicesCommission, his department and his private office toprepare a consolidated list of all the recommendations andsubmissions made in the two published reports and thoseput forward by the bodies represented on the workingparty. That list was to show the views of the various bodiesand set out suggested priorities.
This was to be primarily a secretariat exercise, ratherthan a policy exercise, because the views of the variousbodies had been well thrashed out over the past few years.The working party was not intended to be a vehicle toreopen debates that had dragged on in some cases for years.Nonetheless, if unanimity of view could be achieved, somuch the better.
The Attorney General endorsed the President’ssuggestion, and in February asked that I convene theworking party. The working party’s report was delivered tothe Attorney General in early May. The report covered 94different proposals for changes to the Act and 14 to the
Regulation. There was a very high level of agreementbetween the various parties involved. Where there weredifferences of view, some could be easily accommodated inthe drafting of the legislation should the Attorney Generalagree to the recommended amendments. There were only avery few substantive issues where there was strongdisagreement between the parties.
A number of the proposed amendments are veryimportant. Many will simplify procedures, and so enablequicker resolution of matters - which will be of benefit tothe practitioner, complainant, and lessen the burden on thePublic Purpose Fund which meets the financial cost of theinvestigation of complaints and action in the AdministrativeDecisions Tribunal and Supreme Court.
The proposed amendments included enhancing theability of the councils to tell other bodies of the disciplinaryaction that had been taken against a practitioner. Problemsin the legislation identified by the Supreme Court andtribunal in judgments were addressed, as was the questionof what material should be made available to thepractitioner and complainant during the investigation of acomplaint. Issues concerning how a council could betterhandle a complaint against a practitioner who had anincapacity that had led to the complaint were addressed, aswas the extent to which compensation can be awarded tocomplainants and costs awarded against the practitioner.The desirability of a council being able to reprimand apractitioner without their consent was discussed. The dutyof the councils and the commissioner to refer conduct thatmay constitute an offence to the relevant authority andextending the ability of the councils to attach conditions toa practising certificate (so on occasion avoiding the need tocancel the certificate) were canvassed.
The Attorney General acknowledged the ‘considerableeffort’ of the working party in preparing the report, and the‘significant role’ played by the Bar Association’s thenDirector, Professional Conduct, Terrie Gibson, who didmost of the work in preparing the submission andnegotiating with the various contributors. The AttorneyGeneral has indicated that he will be agreeing to most to theproposed amendments. It is anticipated that the necessaryBill will be introduced into the parliament later thiscalendar year.
The Bar Association staff
Only a few of the Bar Association’s staff were involved inthe projects noted above. The rest of the staff were doingwhat I noted in last year’s report: putting in long hours ofvery competent, dedicated effort to provide a qualityservice to members and others.
The fact that the Bar Library staff can at a few minutesnotice provide a barrister about to enter court miles fromPhillip Street with material just found to be essential totheir case is now taken for granted. The ProfessionalDevelopment staff have built from scratch a programme ofwhich not only the Bar Association can be justifiablyproud, but it is already being copied by other Bars. The Professional Conduct staff, unfortunately only toobusy in the past couple of years, are now doing work that
Executive Director’s report - continued
The year in review The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
12
was previously briefed out to solicitors. The Reception staffcontinue to handle dozens of telephone and in personinquiries each day, not all of which have anything to do withthe legal profession. They, and the Legal Assistance staff,continue to see many, often agitated, unrepresentedlitigants who believe it the responsibility of the Bar toprovide pro bono representation in their (at timesunmeritorious) matter.
The Administrative staff continue to provide secretariatsupport for the Bar Association’s many committees,producing minutes and correspondence out of sometimescryptic remarks by barristers discussing aspects of the lawthe staff member has not previous encountered. The Benchand Bar Dinner and 15 bobbers run smoothly, theattendees not realising that only minutes before thefunction the sound system had failed or some hadenthusiastically sought to rearrange the settled seatingplan. The staff processing the practising certificaterenewals, who worked late into the night and at weekendsto enable the certificates to be issued before 30 June,particularly appreciated the letters of thanks they received;they were not so appreciative of the few calls and lettersfrom barristers who believed neither the statutorytimetable nor fee structure applied in respect of their lateapplications. The Public Affairs staff continue to respondto numerous calls from the media (not infrequently at hourswhen most of us are asleep or endeavouring to enjoy theweekend) seeking a Bar Association comment or someonewilling to go on the air at a few minutes notice. Often thesecallers want comment on a judgment they have not thoughtnecessary to read. The Records, Accounts and IT staffquietly support the work of the other staff.
Many thanksThe Bar Association has achieved much this past year of
which it can be justifiably proud. None of this could havebeen done without the work of hundreds of members whogive so generously of their time, expertise (and tolerance) in the preparation of written submissions and oralsubmissions to parliaments, governments and otherinstrumentalities, and to individual members of the public.
I thank all of these members, and the staff, for all thatthey have done on behalf of the Bar Association.
I also wish to acknowledge personally the support I havereceived from the Bar Council and its Executive, and inparticular Walker SC and Harrison SC, with whom I havecontact most days of the year, often at very unsociablehours. Their unstinting support when needed, and theircare not to intervene in matters when that support ordirection is not necessary, is very much appreciated.
PA Selth
Executive Director
Executive Director’s report - continued
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
13
Bar History CommitteeGeoff Lindsay SC (Chair)
Master John McLaughlin
Wendy Robinson QC
Jim Macken
Geoff Kildea
Richard Taperell
Robert Lovas
Francois Kunc
Carol Webster
Chris Ward
Lawrence Ma
Simon Ioannou
Prof. Ros Atherton
Prof. Bruce Kercher
Bar Association staff memberChris Winslow
Bar News CommitteeJustin Gleeson SC (Chair)
Rodney Brender
Rena Sofroniou
Chris O’Donnell
Andrew Bell
Ingmar Taylor
Bar Association staff memberChris Winslow
Criminal Law CommitteeStephen Odgers SC (Chair)
Malcolm Ramage QC
Paul Byrne SC
Peter Johnson SC
Tim Game SC
Brian Knox SC
Glenn Bartley
Patrick Barrett
Roy Ellis
Greg Scragg
Virginia Lydiard
Peter Miller
Carolyn Davenport
Daniel Howard
Phillip Boulten
Chris Hoy
Richard Button
Chrissa Loukas
Mark Buscombe
Matthew Johnston
Gaby Bashir
Michael Coroneos
Bar Association staff memberAnita McInally
Equal Opportunity CommitteeMichael Slattery QC (Chair)
Mullenjaiwakka
Chris Ronalds
Virginia Lydiard
Hugh Marshall
Robert Kaye
Angela Bowne
Michael Barr
Chrissa Loukas
Robert Newlinds
Rashda Rana
Sandra Duggan
Dominique Hogan-Doran
Ingmar Taylor
Rachel Pepper
Julia Lonergan
Kate Eastman
Louise Byrne
Michelle Painter
Bar Association staff memberTravis Drummond
Committees of the Bar AssociationAs at 30 June 2003
Appointments
The Bar Association’s committees regularly advise and assist the Bar Council inthe preparation of detailed submissions regarding draft legislation and currentissues in the administration of justice. The expert commentaries of BarAssociation committees are sought by governments and opposition politicalparties, as well as law reform agencies.
The committees are comprised of Bar Association members, who volunteer forservice and give generously of their time. Some committees include members ofthe community in their ranks. An indication of their hard work may be seen in thecommittee reports, beginning on page 25.
Appointments The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
14
Committees of the Bar Association - continuedAs at 30 June 2003
Family Law CommitteeGrahame Richardson SC (Chair)
Robert Lethbridge SC
John Berry
Christopher Simpson
Margaret Cleary
Andrew Givney
Greg Johnston
Paul Sansom
Richard Schonell
Judith Housego
Neil Jackson
Bar Association staff memberAnita McInally
Legal Publications Working PartyPeter Kite SC
Rena Sofroniou
Michael McHugh
Lisa Allen (Bar Association)
Chris D’Aeth (Bar Association)
Legal Aid CommitteeTim Game SC (Chair)
Geoff Lindsay SC
Peter Zahra SC
Angela Bowne
Phillip Boulten
Chrissa Loukas
Paul King
Dean Jordan
Mark Buscombe
Bar Association staff memberAnita McInally
Mediation Committee Robert Angyal (Chair)
Steven Rares SC
Richard Bell
Ian Bailey
Paul Blackburn-Hart
Mary Walker
Geraldine Hoeben
Ian Davidson
Katherine Johnson
Susan Phillips
David Knoll
Hugh Stowe
Bar Association staff memberKim Nichols
Personal Injuries LitigationCommittee
Larry King SC (Chair)
John Maconachie QC
Andrew Morrison RFD SC
Richard Seton SC
Ian Cullen
Brian Ferrari
Stuart Torrington
Phillip Mahony
Jim Gracie
Julia Lonergan
Andrew Stone
Justine Hall (Law Societyrepresentative)
Bar Association staff memberKim Nichols
Professional Conduct Committee #1 Anna Katzmann SC (Chair)
Stephen Robb QC
Steven Rares SC
Michael Bozic SC
Roy Ellis
Elizabeth Cohen
John Fernon
Mark Speakman
Richard McHugh
Vicki Hartstein
Frank Veltro
Philippe Gray-Grzeszkiewicz
Community membersSusanne Weress
Kate Nacard
Academic membersAssoc. Prof. Jill Hunter
Committee SecretaryAdele Connor
Professional Conduct Committee #2Michael Slattery QC (Chair)
Ian Temby QC
William Dawe QC
Robert McDougall QC
Hugh Marshall
Robert Kaye
Kate Traill
Andrew Colefax
Fred Curtis
Christopher Millard
Rachael Pepper
Rhonda Bell
Sigrid Higgins
Michael McHugh
Vahan Bedrossian
Community membersJohn Blount
Anna Fader
Sue Thaler
Matthew Smith
Academic membersProf. David Barker
Committee SecretaryHelen Barrett
Appointments The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
15
Committees of the Bar Association - continuedAs at 30 June 2003
Professional Conduct Committee #3 Tom Bathurst QC (Chair)
Martin Einfeld QC
John Maconachie QC
David Davies SC
Peter McEwen SC
John Sheahan SC
Hayden Kelly
Luigi Lamprati
Brian Skinner
Josephine Kelly
James Stevenson
Ingmar Taylor
Peter Brereton
Louise Byrne
Paul Bolster
Community membersHelen Steptoe
Robert Nakhla
John White
Nicholle Nobel
Academic membersBernard Dunne
Committee SecretaryAdele Connor
Professional Conduct Committee #4Bernie Coles QC (Chair)
Peter Graham QC
Philip Hallen SC
Elizabeth Fullerton SC
David J Russell SC
Brian Knox SC
Phillip Mahony
Daniel Howard
Chris Hoy
Patrick Griffin
Carol Webster
Kate Eastman
Community membersProf. Derek Anderson
Phil Marchionni
Carol Randell
Academic membersFrancine Feld
Committee SecretaryHelen Barrett
Professional Indemnity CommitteeTony Meagher SC (Chair)
Peter Garling SC
Noel Hutley SC
Rodney Brender
David Pritchard
Rena Sofroniou
Andrew Bell
Bar Association staff memberPhilip Selth
Professional Standards SchemeCommittee
Brian Rayment QC
Tom Bathurst QC
Andrew Bell
Bar Association staff memberKim Nichols
Taxation CommitteeAnthony Slater QC (Chair)
Holger Sorensen
Christopher Bevan
Peter Fraser
Mark Richmond
Narelle Butler
Bar Association staff memberPhilip Selth
Young Barristers CommitteeHugh Stowe (Chair)
David Ash
Rhonda Bell
Cameron Jackson
Lawrence Ma
Vahan Bedrossian
Stephen Loughnan
Stephanie Fendekian
John Pickering
Alastair Vincent
Bar Association staff memberTravis Drummond
Co-ordinators
Human Rights Co-ordinatorNicholas Cowdery AM QC
Industrial Relations CommissionDuty Barrister Scheme Co-ordinator
Ingmar Taylor
Downing Centre Duty BarristerScheme Co-ordinator
Dominic Toomey
Appointments The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
16
News South Wales members appointed to the BenchFor the year ended 30 June 2003
High Court of AustraliaThe Hon JD Heydon
Federal Court of AustraliaThe Hon Justice A Bennett
Supreme Court of New South WalesThe Hon Justice JW Shaw
The Hon Justice WH Nicholas
The Hon Justice MH Tobias
The Hon Justice RS McColl
Land and Environment Court of New South WalesCommissioner Tim Moore 4 November 2002 - 3 November 2009
District Court of New South WalesHis Hon Judge PG Berman SC
His Hon Judge RP McLoughlin SC
His Hon Judge CD Charteris SC
Local Court of New South WalesMagistrate JA Coombs
Magistrate GB Curran
Magistrate JM Baptie
Australian Industrial Relations CommissionVice President MJ Lawler
Sections of the Bar AssociationAs at 30 June 2003
Administrative lawConvenor: Alan Robertson SC
Secretary: Stephen Lloyd
Common lawConvenor: Anna Katzmann SC
Secretary: Andrew Stone
Constitutional lawConvenor: Stephen Gageler SC
Secretary: David Knoll
Construction lawConvenor: Glen Miller QC
Secretary: Geoff Underwood
Corporations, securities &insolvency law
Convenor: Tom Bathurst QC
Secretary: Rodney Smith SC
Criminal lawConvenor: Peter Johnson SC
Secretary: Glenn Bartley
Environmental, localgovernment & valuation
Convenor: Malcolm Craig QC
Secretary: Josephine Kelly
Family lawConvenor: Grahame Richardson SC
Secretary: Greg Watkins
Intellectual property lawConvenor: David Yates SC
Secretary: Richard Cobden
Maritime, air & transport lawConvenor: Brian Rayment QC
Secretary: Gregory Nell
Trade practices & consumerprotection law
Convenor: Jeffrey Hilton SC
Secretary: Andrew Ogborne
About us The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
17
Bar Association representatives on educational bodiesAs at 30 June 2003
College of Law, Board of DirectorsRichard White SC
Legal Practitioners Admission BoardPeter Taylor SCJeremy Gormly SC
Legal Practitioners Admission Board, LegalQualifications Committee
John FernonJanet OakleyRachel Pepper
Legal Practitioners Admission Board, LawExaminations Committee
Michael Christie
University of Sydney, Faculty of LawPeter Garling SC
University of Technology, Sydney, Faculty BoardGeoff Lindsay SC
University of NSW, Faculty of LawRachel Pepper
University of Wollongong Faculty of Law, VisitingCommittee
Bruce Collins QC
University of Sydney, Law Extension CommitteeChrissa Loukas Anthony O’Brien
Court committees and working partiesAs at 30 June 2003
Commonwealth courts andtribunals
Federal Court of AustraliaCourt User Committee
Malcolm Oakes SC
Federal Court Electronic FilingWorking Party
Michael McHugh
Family Court Case ManagementCommittee
Grahame Richardson SC
Migration ReviewTribunal/Refugee ReviewTribunal Liaison Committee
Nick Poynder
State courts and tribunals
Court of Appeal UsersCommittee
Russell McIlwaine SC
Guy Reynolds SC
Supreme Court Rule Committee Michael Slattery QC
Jeremy Gormly SC
Supreme Court CommercialUsers Committee
Robert Macfarlan QC
Steven Rares SC
Noel Hutley SC
Glen Miller QC
Michael Rudge SC
Rodney Smith SC
David Hammerschlag SC
James Stevenson
Supreme Court Common LawDivision Criminal UsersCommittee
Tim Game SC
Stephen Odgers SC
Supreme Court Common LawDivision Civil Users Committee
Brian Murray QC
Cliff Hoeben AM SC
Supreme Court Company ListUser’s Group
Malcolm Oakes SC
James Thomson
Robert Newlinds
James Johnson
Supreme Court Probate User’sGroup
Michael Willmott
Supreme Court Working Partyfor Establishment of Guidelinesfor Expert Conferences / CourtAppointed Experts
Christopher Gee QC
Leonard Levy SC
Supreme Court Registry UsersGroup
Mr John Hennessy
Mr Michael Meek
Supreme Court Working Partyfor Expert Witnesses inCriminal Trials
Ian McClintock
Statutory appointmentsAs at 30 June 2003
Administrative Decisions TribunalLegal Services Division
Robert Macfarlan QC John McCarthy QC Sharron Norton SC David Officer QC Lionel Robberds QC Wendy Robinson QC John West QC
Equal Opportunities DivisionPenelope Goode Phillipa GormlyChrissa Loukas Jane Needham
General DivisionPenelope GoodeSigrid Higgins Jane Needham Mark Robinson
Community Services DivisionPhillipa Gormly
Legal Aid Commission Board members
Geoff Lindsay SCAlternate: Ian Temby QC
Appointments The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
18
Court committees and working parties - continuedAs at 30 June 2003
Land & Environment CourtUsers Group
Jeffrey Kildea
Land & Environment CourtInformation TechnologyImplementation Group
Jeffrey Kildea
Industrial Relations CommissionUsers Group
Maxwell Kimber SCTrish McDonald
District Court Rule CommitteeRoss Letherbarrow SC
District Court Civil BusinessCommittee
Brian Murray QC Larry King SC
District Court Criminal ListingsReview Committee
Matthew Johnston
Compensation Court RulesCommittee
Brian Ferrari Gregory Beauchamp
Dust Diseases Tribunal RulesCommittee
Brian Ferrari
Local Court (Civil Claims) RuleCommittee
Andrew Kostopoulos
Local Courts (Civil Claims)Court Users Forum
Jeremy Gruzman
St James Local Court UsersForum
Kevin Lapthorn
Local Courts Rule CommitteeKate Traill
Children’s Court AdvisoryCommittee
Matthew Johnston
Legal Aid Review committeesCommittee No.1
John McCarthy QC1st alternate: Paul Menzies QC 2nd alternate: Paul Blacket SC
Committee No.2David Higgs SC1st alternate: Winston Terracini SC 2nd alternate: Anne Healey
Family Law Legal Aid ReviewCommittee No.1
Gregory Moore1st alternate: Richard Schonell 2nd alternate: Anne Rees
Council of Law ReportingNaida Haxton (Editor)Lee Aitken (Consulting Editor)Francis Douglas QCBret Walker SCChristopher Birch SCNoel Hutley SCChristine AdamsonTimothy Castle
National Native Title TribunalJennifer Stuckey-Clarke
Legal Profession Advisory CouncilPhilip Greenwood SCJeremy Gormly SC
Law and Justice FoundationBret Walker SC
Law Week BoardPhilip Selth
Motor Accidents CouncilAndrew Stone
Motor Accidents AuthoritySenior Assessors Service
Brian Murray QCPeter Capelin QCLarry King SCRoss Letherbarrow SC
Claims Assessment andResolution Service
Ian CullenRaymond McLoughlin SC
NSW Attorney General’sDepartment working partiesEvidence Act working party
Stephen Odgers SC
Civil procedure working partyMichael McHughGreg George
Australasian Dispute ResolutionCentre
Richard Bell
Public Interest Law ClearingHouse
Peter MaidenRachel PepperHugh Marshall
Trustees of the Pro BonoDisbursement Fund
Philip Selth
Australian Advocacy InstituteElizabeth Fullerton SC
Fair Trading Tribunal - HomeBuilding Division ConsultationGroup
Simon Kerr
NSW AGs Department, LegalTechnology Reference Group
Jeffrey Kildea
Motor Accidents AssessmentService Users Group (MAAS)
Ross Letherbarrow SCHugh MarshallAndrew Stone
Law Society of New South WalescommitteesCriminal Law Committee
Tim Game SC
Personal Injury CommitteeAndrew Stone
Law Council of AustraliacommitteesAccess to Justice Committee
Christopher Whitelaw
ALRC Working GroupBret Walker SC
Public Liability ReferenceGroup
Ian Harrison SC
Australian Young LawyersCommittee
Hugh Stowe
Advisory Committee onIndigenous Legal Issues
Michael Slattery QCSarah PritchardAnthony McAvoy
Criminal Law National LiaisonCommittee
Tim Game SC (Chair)Bret Walker SCStephen Odgers SC
Equalising Opportunities in theLaw Committee
Chrissa Loukas
Healthcare Liability CommitteeMichael Slattery QCColin O’Connor QC
National Profession ReferenceGroup
Bret Walker SC
Australian Bar Association Vice-President
Ian Harrison SC
Appointments The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
19
Other appointmentsFor the year ended 30 June 2003
Court liaison members 2003As at 30 June 2003
Federal courts and tribunalsHigh Court
David Jackson QC
Federal Court Malcolm Oakes SC
Family Court Grahame Richardson SC
Migration & Refugee Reviewtribunals
Nick Poynder
State courts and tribunalsNSW Court of Appeal
Donald Grieve QC
Supreme Court of NSW -Common Law Division
Richard Burbidge QC
Supreme Court of NSW -Equity Division
Robert Forster SC
Supreme Court of NSW -Possessions List
James Stevenson
Supreme Court of NSW -Defamation List
Steven Rares SC
Supreme Court of NSW -Criminal Matters
Tim Game SC
Supreme Court of NSW -Admiralty List
Sandy Street SC
Land and Environment Court Malcolm Craig QC
Industrial Relations Commissionof NSW
Max Kimber SC
Local Court Kate Traill
Reports
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
20
Promoting the interests of local practising barristers
BarCareFor the year ended 30 June 2003
BarCare is a professional counselling service formembers of the New South Wales Bar Association. Thepanel of medical practitioners and counsellors includes avariety of specialists with the expertise to cover thedifferent needs of members and their families.
In 2002-2003, the major administrative change toBarCare has been the addition of three new counsellors,bringing to seven the number on the panel. The three newmembers are:
Susie Danos.
Susie is a psychologist with specialised training andexperience in loss and grief, depression, anxiety, panicdisorder, drug, alcohol and gambling addiction,parenting/blended families, separation/divorce, and sextherapy. Over many years, her work with the Family Courtof Australia has brought her into frequent contact withmembers of the legal profession.
Ross and Dawn Colquhoun
Ross is a clinical psychologist and the Clinical Directorof Addiction Treatment & Psychology Services. Dawn is apsychotherapist. Both have extensive experience in thetreatment of addictions and specialise in a number of areasincluding depression, anxiety disorders, post traumaticstress disorder, eating disorders, relationship, family andgroup counselling, psychological assessment andcounselling for forensic, personal injury and occupationalrehabilitation.
Survey of BarCare consultationsA questionnaire was sent recently to the members of thepanel with a view to obtaining a profile of consultations.
Number of members seen 18
Female: 5
Male: 13
Most common age bracket 45-54
Most common length of time in practice 11 years +
Most common locality of practice Sydney CBD
Most common types of problem overwork, leading to depression and anxiety
Number of family members seen 1
Number of members who continued with treatment after the initial consultation 12
All panel members said they were pleased with the waythe scheme was working.
Some of the general observations made by members ofthe panel as listed below.
• One member of the panel noted that, having counselleda number of barristers since BarCare’s inception, ‘thereis no doubt just how stressful the job of being a barristeralmost universally is, particularly for those withemotional/personality vulnerability’.
• Confidentiality is important for most clients.
• The issues arising from dual-career marriages andexcessive working hours are common.
• Two couples found out important informationabout BarCare from the Bar Association’s website – Another couple by ‘word of mouth’ fromcolleagues already attending.
• The importance of BarCare can be gaugedfrom the fact that, even though clients mayhave a family doctor, they do not always seemcomfortable with discussing or disclosing theseissues to their local GP.
• Some clients come for a ‘look see’ at whattherapy might have to offer (i.e. the initialconsultation). Some are satisfied after onesession that they need to ‘take stock’andrebalance their lives.
The history of BarCare
In July 2000 the Bar Council Executiverecommended to Bar Council that an independentcounselling service be established along the samelines as LawCare, the Law Society’s system of providing counselling and medical treatment to solicitors.
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Reports The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
21
BarCare - continuedFor the year ended 30 June 2003
After a series of meetings with the New South WalesMedical Board, medical practitioners and members of theBar, the structure of the scheme (four panel members, withthe initial consultation paid by the Bar Association) wasagreed. In May 2001 a brochure describing the new schemewas distributed to members. A formal announcement of theintroduction of the scheme was made in the May/June 2001edition of Bar Brief.
How it works
Barristers and their families seeking assistance initiallycontact a BarCare counsellor and make an appointmentfor consultation. The consultation takes place at thecounsellor’s professional rooms or by telephone. The BarAssociation covers the costs arising from the initialconsultation with the BarCare counsellor.
During the initial consultation the counsellor seeks toidentify the nature and extent of the problem. With theclient’s permission, the counsellor may formally consultwith a medical practitioner or other health professional ofthe member’s choice to assess the treatment options
available - both therapeutic and medical - prior todiscussing a treatment programme.
The treatment programme may involve furthercounselling sessions with the BarCare counsellor, and or areferral to a specialist in a particular discipline, or to aspecific support programme for appropriate treatment.
The BarCare counsellors have access to a wide networkof professionals from different disciplines for referralpurposes or to discuss aspects of treatment. These includeboth general and specialist medical practitioners, socialworkers, psychologists, stress management consultants,dependency counsellors, as well as qualified people in otherprofessional services.
Participation in any part of the BarCare service isvoluntary. Confidentiality is assured.
BarCare helpline: (02) 9230 0433
www.nswbar.asn.au/barcare
Report of the Management Committee of the Barristers’ Benevolent AssociationFor the year ended 30 June 2003
Every year there are barristers who encounter personalmisfortune or require some form of assistance from theBenevolent Association in order to overcome a majorproblem.
Sudden deaths, serious illness, accident, mental illness,cancers, suicides, HIV/AIDS, alcoholism, families ofdeceased members who have some need and seriousfinancial misfortune are all problems which have beenaddressed by the Barristers’ Benevolent Association overthe last few years.
The Benevolent Association can respond to calls forassistance without formality and without delays. There are no formal applications, forms, waiting periods, means tests or other predetermined administrativerequirements. There have been times when assistance hasbeen provided on the same day as information about aproblem became known.
The assistance given is generally financial, but it is notlimited to money. Arrangements have been made for legalassistance, for independent psychiatric assessment, fornegotiating housing, negotiating with banks, preparing
financial position statements, or dealing with other aspectsof members’ financial problems and intervening withcreditors where that becomes necessary.
Every aspect of the operation of the BenevolentAssociation, from the donations made to it, through tonotification that a member is in difficulty and providingassistance is an expression of the collegiate nature of the lifeof a group of independent individuals collectively operatingas the Bar.
In the financial year 2002-2003 the ManagementCommittee approved eight grants (totalling $106,655) andthree loans (totalling $52,523).
Information that a member is in difficulty can come fromany source. The most common source of information is frombarristers who are aware that a floor member is indifficulty. Very often clerks will make contact, butsometimes family members will make an approach, eitherdirectly to a member of the Bar Council or to the ExecutiveDirector. This contact can take the form of a telephone callor letter to the Executive Director or a Bar councillor, andis treated with the utmost confidentiality.
Reports The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
22
Contributions to the Barristers’ Benevolent Fund of New South WalesContributions for the year ended 30 June 2003
Contributions $5,000 and above
Francis Douglas QC
Bret Walker SC
Contributions $2,000 to $3000
Great Bar Boat RaceEntry Fees 2002
Craig Leggat
Tim McKenzie
Contributions $1,000 to $1,999
Anthony Bartley SC
Paul Byrne SC
Bernie Coles QC
Philip Doherty
James Dupree
John Durack SC
Richard Edmonds SC
Estate of the late HonMichael Helsham AODFC QC
Simon Kerr
Andrew Martin
John Murphy
Richard Royle
Frank Santisi
John Webster SC
John West QC
Contributions $500 to $999 Peter Bodor QC
Paul Le Gay Brereton SC
Campbell Bridge SC
Stephen Campbell SC
Richard Cavanagh
Jeremy Clarke
Bruce Collins QC
Ian Cullen
Sandra Duggan
The Hon RJ Ellicott QC
His Honour Judge MJFinnane RFD QC
Stephen Flett
Mark Gilbert
Justin Gleeson SC
G Barry Hall QC
Simon Harben
Ian Harrison SC
John Hislop QC
Clifton Hoeben AM RFD SC
Christopher Hoy
David Jackson QC
Gregory Jones
Anna Katzmann SC
William Kearns SC
Larry King SC
Leonard Levy SC
Terrence Lynch
John Machonachie QC
Ian McGillicuddy
Aziz Melick SC
Geoffrey Nicholson QC
David Nock SC
David Officer QC
Bruce Oslington QC
James Poulos QC
Steven Rares SC
Dennis Ronzani
Michael Slattery QC
Clive Steirn SC
John Timbs QC
The Hon Justice MHTobias
Carol Webster
John Wilson
Contributions $100 to $499 Michael Abdul Karim
The Hon Justice MFAdams
Kelvin Andrews
Her Honour Judge CEBackhouse QC
Robert Anthony Baker
The Hon Charles Bannon QC
The Hon RichardBarbour QC
Paul Barnes
Graham Barter
John Bartos
Thomas Bathurst QC
Richard Battley
Philip Beale
Richard Beasley
Nicholas Beaumont
Richard Bell
Robert Bellamy
Peter Biscoe QC
His Honour Judge ADBishop
Paul Blackburn-Hart
Phillip Boulten
Mark Boulton
Michael Bozic SC
Mark Brabazon
The Hon Justice JEBrownie
The Hon Justice JPBryson
George Brzostowski
David Buchanan SC
Stephen Burley
Gregory Burton
Peter Callaghan SC
Andrew Campbell
The Hon Justice MWCampbell
Peter Capelin QC
David Caspersonn
Keith Chapple
Warren Chipchase
Stephen Climpson
Nicholas Confos
Peter Cook
Roderick Cordara SC
John Costigan
David Cowan
Gerard Craddock
Malcolm Craig QC
Gregory Curtin
Ian Davidson
David Davies SC
Francis Davis
Hament Dhanji
Geoffrey Digby QC
Stephen Dixon
Simon Doctor
Brian Donovan QC
Peter Dooley
Ronald Driels
James Duncan
The Hon Justice JRDunford
John Philip Durack
Peter Dwyer
Martin Einfeld QC
Michael Elkaim SC
Anthony Enright
Clive Evatt
The Hon Elizabeth AEvatt AC
Dorothea Falloon
John Fernan
John Fernon
Brian Ferrari
Steven Flanigan
Robert Forster SC
David Galpin
Antonio Gidaro
James Glissan QC
John Gooley
Jeremy Gormly SC
Martin Gorrick
Glenn Gould
His Honour Judge GJGraham
Michael Green
Robert Greenhill SC
Roger Hamilton
John Harris
Anthony Hatzis
Terrence Healey
John Heazlewood
Alister Henskens
The Hon Geoffrey Herkes
Geraldine Hoeben
David Hooke
Gregory Hosking SC
Thomas Hughes
Brendan Hull
John Ibbotson
George Ikners
Bennett Ingram
Anthony Jamieson
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Barristers’ Benevolent Fund of New South Wales - continued
Contributions for the year ended 30 June 2003
Peter Johnson SC
Eoin Johnston
The Hon Justice PMKavanagh
James Kearney
David Kell
Stuart Kettle
Jeffrey Kildea
Maxwell Kimber SC
Peter Kintominas
The Hon Justice D Kirby
Ernest Knoblanche QC
Allen Lakeman
Kevin Lapthorn
Ian Lawry
Christopher Leahy SC
The Hon Justice DDLevine
Stephen Loomes
George Lucarelli
Mark Lynch
Robert Macfarlan QC
Phillip Mahony
Peter Maiden
Nicholas Manousaridis
Janet Manuell
Robin Margo SC
Hugh Marshall
Paul Mason
Philip Massey
Michael McAuley
Mark McDermott
John McDonald
Robert McDougall QC
Terence McGill
Gordon McGrath
Dr Frank McGrath AM OBE
Garry McIlwaine
Russell McIlwaine SC
Adrian McInnes QC
Ross McKeand
John McKenzie
Master John McLaughlin
Gregory McNally
Terese Messner
Jeffrey Miles
Glen Miller QC
Robert Montgomery
Cameron Moore
His Honour Judge JAMoore
Patrick Moran
Linton Morris QC
Judith Mundey
David Murr SC
His Honour Judge TFNaughton QC
Ian Neil
Peter Neil SC
James Nelson
Hugh Newton
Neil Newton
Peter Newton
His Honour Judge JCNicholson SC
Gregory Niven
Paul Nolan
His Honour Judge SRNorrish QC
Malcolm Oakes SC
Peter O’Connor
Bruce Odling
Gary O’Gorman
Elizabeth Olsson
Robert O’Neill
David Patch
Geoffrey Petty SC
Joseph Phelan
Jeffrey Phillips
Kevin Pierce
Borys Pluznyk
Dominic Priestley
Jonathon Priestley
The Hon Rodney Purvis QC
Malcolm Ramage QC
Brian Rayment QC
His Honour Judge NGRein SC
Anthony Renshaw
Anthony Reynolds
Garry Rich
John Ringrose
Gary Roberts
Michael Robinson
Jonathon Robson
Michael Rollinson
Eugene Romaniuk
Kim Roser
Geoffrey Rundle
Peter Russell
John Ryan
James Sainty
Gregory Scragg
Jeffery Sewell
Julian Sexton SC
The Hon George Sharpe
Bernard John Sharpe
The Hon Justice CSSheller
Christopher Simpson
The Hon John SlatteryAO QC
David Smallbone
Rex Smart
Richard Smith
Rena Sofroniou
The Hon Justice HDSperling
Stephen Stanton
Alison Stenmark SC
Kenneth Stewart
Peter Stitz
Hugh Stowe
John Stowe QC
Wendy Strathdee
Ian Strathdee QC
Timothy Studdert
Terrence Sullivan
Alan Sullivan QC
Garry Sundstrom
The Hon Justice RNTalbot
John Tancred
Ian Temby QC
George Thomas
John Thompson
David Thorley
Alexander Todd
Iain Todd
Robyn Tupman
Christopher Twomey
His Honour Judge PUrquhart QC
Gus Van Der Vlag
Christian Vindin
William Walsh
Ralph Warren
Charles Waterstreet
The Hon RaymondWatson AM QC
Geoffrey Watson SC
Oswald Watt
Richard Weinstein
John Whittle SC
Dudley Williams
Michael Williams SC
John Wilson
The Hon Justice FLWright
The Hon Justice PWYoung
Contributions $10 to $99 Michael Adamo
Neil Adams
Michael Allen
David Ash
James Barnett
Jenny Baxter
Robert Beech-Jones
The Hon Hubert Bell
Rhonda Bell
Anthony Bowen
Colin Bowie QC
Luke Brasch
Ronald Broadhead
Grant Carolan
Ross Carruthers
James Clark
The Hon M J Clarke QC
David Cochrane
The Hon Brian Cohen
Peter Cummings
His Honour Judge TSDavidson QC
Jonathan de VereTyndall
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Barristers’ Benevolent Fund of New South Wales - continued
Contributions for the year ended 30 June 2003
Ronald Desiatnik
Alyn Doig
David Dura
Maureen Fanning
The Hon Mervyn Finlay
William Fisher AO QC
Malcolm Fitzsimons
Garry Foster
David Freeman
Andrew Gee
The Hon Richard Gee
Christopher Gee QC
Geoffrey Gemmell
Roger Gillard QC
Garry Gillett
Melissa Gillies
The Hon Justice LC Glynn
Geoffrey Gorton
Richard Grady
Geoffrey Graham
Philippe Grzeszkiewicz
Trevor Hall
Malcolm Hardwick QC
Annette Haughton
Brent Haverfield
Michael Heath
Robert Hewson
Francis Hicks
Alan Hogan
William Hosking QC
The Hon Justice BM James
Philip Jenkyn
The Hon Hugh Johnston QC
John Jones
Lynette Judge
Leonard Karp
Peter Kennedy-Smith
Dr John Keogh
Gemunu Kumarasinhe
Stephen Lloyd
William Lloyd
James Loxton
Peter Lyons QC
The Hon Justice RN Madgwick
His Honour Judge BE Mahoney QC
Peter Mallon
Michael McHugh
Louise McManus
Stephen McMillan
Aldo Monzo
Peter Mooney
Douglas Murphy
The Hon Justice PJ Newman
Robert Newton
His Honour Judge JR Nield
The Hon Judge John O’Meally AM RFD
David O’Neil
Richard Page
John Papayanni
Melissa Perry
Richard Perry
Russell Peterson
Cathy Pinkerton
The Hon Justice JS Purdy
Francis Purnell SC
John Reading SC
George Rummery QC
Donnell Ryan
Christopher Simpson
Rodney Skiller
Mark Southwick
Michael Spartalis
Leigh Stone
Alexandra Sullivan
John Trapp
Julian Trebeck
James Viney
The Hon Justice LD Waddy RFD
Gregory Watkins
Murray Wilcox
David Wilkins
Leslie Wolf
Lesley-Gaye Wong
Sophie York
Contributions to $25Ignatius Asuzu
Ted Baskerville
Roland Bonnici
Andrew Bulley
Ian Butcher
Jeffrey Collins
Robert Colquhoun
Jacob Fajgenbaum QC
David Fitzgibbon
The Hon M Foster QC
Evgenios Gramelis
Abigail Gruzman
Mark Gunning
Trevor Haines AO
John Henness
Andrew Jungwirth
Patrick Keyzer
His Honour Judge WH Knight
Andrew Kostopoulos
Ashok Kumar
The Hon Jack Lee QC
Mary Lilienthal
Lawrence Ma
John McCaffrey
Scott Miller
Trevor Neill
Peter Paish
Gregory Poole
Jason Potts
The Hon Sir William Prentice MBE
Roger Quinn
Dr James Renwick
Wayne Russell
Ben Salmon QC
Richard Sergi
David Shoebridge
Gregory Stanton
Wendy Thompson
William Thompson
Nicholas Ulrick
David Weinberger
Christopher Wood
Justin Young
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Equal Opportunity Committee
During 2003 the Equal Opportunity Committee hascontinued to expand a number of programmes that havebeen trialled in the last two years and is piloting a majorimitative to assist barristers who also have primary caringresponsibility for children. This year the committee hasmaintained its principal focus on assisting Indigenouslawyers and law students who wish to come to the Bar andpromoting the interests of the women at the Bar.
The Indigenous Lawyer’s StrategyThe strategy, adopted by the Bar in 2000, is designed
to assist Indigenous lawyers and law students withaspirations of coming to the Bar to achieve that objectiveand to build sound practices at the Bar. The IndigenousLawyer’s Strategy Subcommittee is a special committee setup to implement the strategy. Implementation of thestrategy continues to be a major focus of the committee andthe subcommittee.
Another Indigenous barrister, Lincoln Crowley, startedas a reader in February 2003 and he demonstrates someearly success with the strategy. He is reading in part withAndrew Haesler of Carl Shannon Chambers and ChrisLonergan of Seventh Floor Garfield Barwick Chambers, as part of the strategy as well as having another tutor fromthe non-criminal Bar. Joining Mullenjaiwakka and AnthonyMcAvoy at the NSW Bar, his arrival increases to three thenumber of Indigenous barristers practising at the Bar.
A special trust fund, The Indigenous Barristers’Trust - the MumShirl Fund, was established in2002 to create a pool of funds to provide financialassistance to Indigenous barristers especially intheir first few years of practice. After theAustralian Taxation Office declined to grant theTrust deductible gift recipient status under theIncome Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth), thetrustees initiated a review of the ATO’s decision inthe Federal Court. The Hon. Justice Gylesdetermined that the Trust could claim deductiblegift recipient status as the Trust was established forthe benefit of the Indigenous community: Trusteesof the Indigenous Barristers’ Trust vCommissioner of Taxation [2002] FCA 1474. JohnDurack SC and David Charles volunteered theirlegal advice and their time to represent theTrustees in the Federal Court for the proceedings.
The students participating in the University ofNSW Indigenous Pre-Law Programme attendedthe Bar Association for a day during their courselate in January 2003. They were taken to chambersand introduced to the working lives of barristers.They then visited and were given an insight into thecareer path and professional experience of a judgeby The Hon. Justice Sully. This visit is an annualevent and is important in introducing newIndigenous law students to the careeropportunities available at the Bar.
An important part of the Indigenous lawyers’strategy is increasing the contacts betweenbarristers and Indigenous law students, to
increase the students’ direct understanding of work at theBar. Employment opportunities were found for threerecent graduates as associates to District Court judges andassistance was given to one who became a researchassistant in the Federal Court. Five law students wereassisted in finding part-time employment either at the BarAssociation or with groups of barristers during the year.Principally through the work of the EO Committee’sDeputy Chair, Chris Ronalds, the sub-committee continues to seek out part-time workopportunities for Indigenous law students with barristers,to develop their skills, experience and contacts within thelaw during their university studies.
Women at the BarDuring the past 18 months the EO Committee looked at
the issue of assisting barristers who have primary caringresponsibilities for children. The committee hasinvestigated whether the Bar could develop an initiative toassist in the provision of urgently needed back-upemergency childcare services to cover situations where theexisting support network failed for such barristers.
The initiative that was finally proposed by the committeeas a result of this investigation can best be described as an‘in-home care scheme’. A pilot for the scheme commencedin May 2003 and will run for six months. During and at theend of the six months pilot the scheme is being assessed by
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Equal Opportunity Committee - continued
Jane Smythe & Associates, an independent work and familyconsultancy, for its feasibility to be offered more widely tothe Bar. Some nine barrister families have participated inthe initiative, which is being trialled through the wintermonths when childhood sicknesses are at their highestlevels. Anecdotal reports as to the working of the schemeare very encouraging so far.
The scheme is being operated by a service provider withextensive experience in the childcare industry, McArthurManagement Services (‘McArthur’). The scheme enables abarrister facing children’s sickness or any other emergency,or just when normal childcare arrangements unexpectedlyfail, to make one telephone call to McArthur for help.McArthur then makes all the necessary arrangements for acarer to arrive at the barrister’s home or collect the child asis required. The children, through regular periodic contactin a general caring role, already know the carer. Thecentralised telephone system operated by McArthur is a 24-hour service. McArthur will have a comprehensivedatabase supporting the facility.
The committee’s informal research indicates that manybarristers would readily use this facility if it existed. Thegood take up rate for the pilot now being run also indicatesthis. The idea of the scheme arose from a number ofcomplaints by barristers that they lacked this kind ofsupport. This practical response is now underway. So far asthe Bar is aware this is the first scheme of its type in Australiafor professionals with primary caring responsibilities forchildren. Detailed work on the initiative and in launching thepilot has been undertaken by Rashda Rana.
In 2003 the committee continued its highly successfulseries of ‘Welcome to the Bar’ days for female law studentsin their final and penultimate year of university studies.This programme aims to ensure equality of opportunity forall qualified people who wish to pursue a career at the Bar.The programme seeks to ensure that female law studentsconsider the Bar as a viable career option. The appreciativecomments from the many law students who haveparticipated in the programme since its inception in 2001have supported its continuation as part of the permanentwork of the committee.
This year the Equal Opportunity Committee has hostedvisits from students at Macquarie University and theUniversity of Wollongong and the University of WesternSydney. The Welcome to the Bar days commence with thestudents attending for half a day in which they attend courtand chambers and have the opportunity to observe closelythe daily work of a female barrister. The female judges ofthe Federal and Supreme courts have supported theprogramme. The judges make themselves available tospeak to the students in small groups accompanied by oneof the many female barristers who volunteer to assist. Theprogramme is arranged for a Friday when the High Courtis hearing Special Leave applications in Sydney to enablethe students also to observe a sitting of the High Court.This is a particularly valuable experience for thosestudents from universities not in close proximity to theQueens Square Law Courts Building. The success of thisprogrammes owes much to Louise Byrne’s detailed work inorganizing the visit days.
The committee’s mentoring scheme is now assisting thethird group of women since its inception. The mentoringscheme is administered on an ongoing basis by asubcommittee of the EO Committee, comprised of RachelPepper, Michelle Painter and Sandra Duggan. Thementoring scheme is offered to female barristers at the endof their first year of practice. Eligible barristers are writtento each March and in September. These months coincidewith the conclusion of the first year of practice of thebarristers being offered the opportunity to be mentored.
Participation in the scheme - either as a mentor or as amentored barrister is voluntary. Each scheme participant isassigned a mentor. Mentors are drawn from seniorpractitioners. A mentor may be a silk or a senior junior.The committee seeks to ensure that the mentor practices inthe practice area identified by the participating barrister asof interest to her. Both current and aspirational work areasare considered by the committee, in consultation with thebarrister, in assigning a mentor. The scheme now works soeffectively that female barristers who have been mentoredin the past now speak to those joining the scheme about itsvalue for them.
Bar History Committee
A principal aim of the Bar History Committee is toobtain, preserve and publish material relating to thehistory of the New South Wales Bar for the benefit of itsmembers and the public. The 2002-2003 reporting year hasbeen one of achievement for the committee, with thecommencement or successful completion of a number ofimportant projects in support of that aim.
It was noted in the 2002 annual report that the ForbesSociety was formed under the sponsorship of the BarAssociation and is intended to promote the study ofAustralian legal history. The Forbes Society is registered asa company limited by guarantee and has been endorsed asan income tax exempt charity. The Francis Forbes Fund, ofwhich the society is trustee, has been endorsed both as anincome exempt charity and a deductible gift recipient.
The foremost achievement of the year was the successfullaunch of the Forbes Society’s ongoing programme of publiclectures and publications.
The inaugural Francis Forbes lecture on Australian legal history was delivered by Ian Barker QC on 28 November 2002 regarding ‘The history of trial by jury inNew South Wales’.
Barker QC, a former president of the Bar Association,analysed the way in which a penal colony, governed by the
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military, and with deep social divisions, was able toimplement a system of trial by jury and gradually broadeneligibility for jury service. He concluded with an overviewof more recent legislation that has served to graduallyrestrict the right of an accused to a trial by jury for all butthe most serious of crimes. By the end of the reportingperiod, the lecture was being prepared for publication laterin 2003.
During 2002-2003, preparations were also finalised forthe 2003 Forbes Lecture, to be delivered by The Hon PEPowell AM on Wednesday 15 October 2003, on the topic of‘The origins and development of the Protective Jurisdictionof the Supreme Court of NSW’.
A web site was also created for the Forbes Society atwww.forbessociety.org.au, which contains details ofupcoming events, links to other legal history pages on theInternet and membership application forms.
In 2001 Dr John Bennett was engaged by the HistoryCommittee to transcribe and edit the diary of JohnCallaghan, a nineteenth-century NSW District Courtjudge. After a considerable effort by Dr Bennett acompleted manuscript was delivered to the committee inearly 2003. Preparations are under way for publicationlater in the year.
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Professional Standards Scheme Committee
The Professional Standards Scheme Committee wasestablished to assist the Bar Council in the preparation of asubmission to the Professional Standards Council forrecognition of a barristers’ scheme under the ProfessionalStandards Act 1994.
Only barristers who hold a New South Wales practisingcertificate and who are members of the Bar Associationwith the required level of insurance will benefit from thescheme once it is in force. The scheme will have the effectof limiting the amount of damages payable for harm causedby a practising member of the association in the course oftheir practice.
Information regarding claims made against barristersfor the last ten years is required to accompany the BarAssociation’s application. This information has recentlybeen acquired from all of the insurers and has been putinto aggregated form so that the individual insurerscannot be identified. The committee will decide on the‘cap’ for the level of liability for the scheme based on theclaims information.
The committee is hopeful that the draft scheme it submitsto Bar Council will be approved and lodged with theProfessional Standards Council before the end of 2003.
The committee will continue to work closely with the BarCouncil over the next few months to formulate submissionsto the Attorney General in relation to possible amendmentsto the Act to improve its operation.
There have been positive moves over the last twelvemonths regarding the introduction of federal professionalstandards legislation. Reports have been received that theinsurance ministers from all states and territories haveconfirmed their commitment to implementing professionalstandards legislation on a nationally consistent basis. Thisdevelopment is welcomed by the Professional StandardsScheme Committee.
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Reports Arranging and promoting continuing professional development
Continuing professional development in 2002-03The Bar Association provided 172.5 hours of CPD in the
2002/03 practising certificate year. CPD seminars andevents were conducted at a variety of locations including:the June 2002 Peppers conference; the Bar AssociationCommon Room; Carl Shannon Chambers; ParramattaCBD; University of Technology, Sydney Law School;Australian National University; and at the law schools inNewcastle, Parramatta and Lismore.
Effective alliances have been established with UTS andlaw schools in each of the regional areas and the ACT, toallow CPD to be delivered in the region and DowntownSydney on a low-cost basis. The Bar Association’s interestin partnership with regional law schools has been warmlyand positively received by law students, and the law schoolsthemselves. Regional solicitors are paying registration feesand attending these CPD mini-conferences for MCLEpurposes. In 2003-2004, it is hoped the Bar CouncilExecutive’s visits to regional areas can be timed to coincidewith the regional mini-conference programme.
A development which has emerged is the interest of smallstudy groups of barristers, floors, and chambers, indeveloping their own CPD. A protocol to be followed bygroups of barristers who wish to provide their own groupCPD has been developed. The Professional DevelopmentDepartment has been proactive in the facilitation of thisprocess. The Bar Association has also been active in itssupport for the ACT and regional Bars to provide their ownCPD independently of the resources of the Bar Association,pursuant to an ongoing dialogue with the Director ofStudies.
Working parties convened by senior barristers for eachof the programmes, and for each of the four strands ofCPD, determine the goals, curriculum and strategies, thematerials to be used, and the instructors to be engaged inthe delivery of the programmes. Under the aegis of theseworking parties, strong measures will continue through2003-2004 to ensure that overlap and repetition is avoided,that full integration is achieved, and that quality andeconomies continue to improve.
Working partiesReading, education, training and professionaldevelopment programmes
Continuing Professional DevelopmentBret Walker SC (Convenor)
Peter Hastings QC
Justin Gleeson SC
Alison Stenmark SC
Luigi Lamprati
Mary Walker
Bar Practice CoursePeter Taylor SC
Phil Greenwood SC (Convenor)
Rachel Pepper
Kelly Rees
ReadingDavid Nock SC (Convenor)
John Maconachie QC
Larry King SC
Kate Traill
Bar examsDavid Davies SC (Convenor)
Bret Walker SC
Bernard Sharpe
Carolyn Davenport
Gordon Lerve
Janet Oakley
Rashda Rana
Rachel Pepper
Sigrid Higgins
Grant Carolan
Education, training and professional development programmes
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Education, training and professional development programmes - continued
Working parties - strandsAdvocacy, mediation and other barristers’ skillsPeter Taylor SC (Convenor)Christopher Gee QCDavid Jackson QCSteven Rares SCPhilip Greenwood SCPeter MaidenGreg LaughtonChris RonaldsCarolyn DavenportRobert AngyalDavid Jordan
Substantive law Richard White SC (Convenor)Brian Rayment QCThomas Bathurst QCGlen Miller QCMalcolm Craig QCAnthony Slater QCJeffrey Hilton SCSteven Rares SCGeoff Lindsay SCAlan Robertson SCAnna Katzmann SCPeter Johnson SCDavid Yates SCGrahame Richardson SCStephen Odgers SCStephen Gageler SC
Ethics and regulation of the profession Tom Hughes QC (Convenor)Bernie Coles QCPeter Garling SCDavid Davies SCPeter McEwen SCGreg Laughton Chris Ronalds David Jordan
Management (risk, practice & personal)Peter Kite SC (Convenor)Julian Van AalstChris RonaldsJohn LevingstonPaul DaleyAnne Sinclair
The Reading Programme: including Bar exams, Bar Practice Course and reading period
There has been an increase in the number ofpractitioners entering the Bar Association’s readingprogrammes during 2002-2003. Seventy-three candidatesregistered for one or more of the June 2002 Bar exams; 87registered for one or more of the November 2002 Barexams; and 91 candidates registered for one or more of theJune 2003 exams.
The August 2002 Bar Practice Course numbered 27 readers. The February 2003 BPC contained 42 readers.It is anticipated that the August 2003 course will containapproximately 36 readers, with an additional 12 readerschoosing to defer and undertake the first course in 2004.
A working party of 40 barristers, convened by DavidDavies SC, now provides the Professional DevelopmentDepartment with the necessary support for implementationof Bar Council policy in relation to the Bar exams. The 40barristers involved in the Bar Exams Programme each haveparticular tasks and responsibilities, and the outcome isthat the entire programme is now being much moreexpeditiously and effectively administered than waspreviously the case. Particular barristers have beenassigned key responsibilities, such as maintenance of therequired reading lists in each of the three areas forexamination. Details of the responsibilities are maintainedon the Bar Association’s web site, and barristers withquestions about the syllabus to be pursued in areas ofconcern, such as ethics, may communicate directly with thebarrister who is designated on the web site as having therelevant responsibility.
In 2003/04 in relation to the Bar Practice Course theProfessional Development Department’s emphasis will be on:
• attaining a higher level of commitment from thesenior Bar to the role of instructing in the BarPractice Course;
• strengthening the content relating to practicemanagement, and to ethics and regulation of theprofession;
• developing materials, particularly with respect to thelatter, which would enable basic principles to beinculcated in transactional contexts;
• place emphasis on a range of skills wider than curialadvocacy in Supreme Court civil matters;
• providing fresh moot transactions capable ofreinvigorating the interest of barristers and membersof the judiciary who have been engaged routinely inthe Bar Practice Course for over a decade; and
• participation by the state judiciary in the BarPractice Course.
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Education, training and professional development programmes - continued
Plans for 2003/04 and beyond• Progress has been made in the development of a core
curriculum in each of the four CPD strands, to bepresented in a series separate from the generalWednesday evening Common Room series, commencingfrom September 2003.
A core curriculum has been developed by working partiesfor practice management and advocacy, convenedrespectively by Peter Kite SC and Peter Taylor SC. A core curriculum for ethics and regulation of theprofession is close to finalisation. Particular subject areaswithin the substantive law, practice and procedure, andevidence strand of CPD have been reduced to a corecurriculum, namely, trade practices, administrative law,criminal law, and intellectual property.
The core curriculum will be presented only in theCommon Room, on a regular Tuesday evening basis. As with the general Wednesday evening series, seminarswill be recorded, and papers made available on the BarAssociation’s web site, for use by study groups, floors,chambers, the ACT Bar and the regional Bars and othergroupings of barristers, in their in-house CPDprogrammes.
• The annual Tutors and Readers Dinner will beupgraded to serve as a model in every relevant respectfor tutor/reader functions, which previously involvedtutors and readers in a series of casual lunches, drinks,and post-Bar Practice Course excursions, spread overthe entire practice year. The plan, to be implementedfrom the annual Tutors and Readers Dinner, on 25 July 2003, is for one prestige, high qualityfunction to be conducted each year in late July.
• There has been a complete revision of the readingconditions on practising certificates, aimed atstrengthening the controls on barristers in their initialpractice year.
• The purchase of additional audio equipment and ademountable dais for the Bar Association CommonRoom, to allow presentation of interactive advocacydemonstrations to large groups. Lighting will beaddressed in 2003-2004.
• The Professional Development Department hasbenefited from the reconfiguration and rededication ofthe basement premises and is now able to conduct theentire Bar Exams Programme, and more of the BarPractice Course on site, on a basis free of the cost ofroutinely hiring the Sydney University Assembly Hall,and the National Dispute Centre facilities.
• It is hoped that with the advent of the members-onlyrestricted access section of the Bar Association’s website, members will have even greater access to CPDmaterial, including papers, at any time.
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Reports Making recommendations and promoting the administration of justice
The Commonwealth Government’s perennial attemptsto find solutions for the problematic family law jurisdictionhave made 2002-2003 yet another busy year for the FamilyLaw Committee. Nevertheless, significant progress hasbeen made towards reform of both legislation and dailypractice and procedure in the Family Court.
SubmissionsDuring the course of the year the committee prepared
submissions on a number of issues, including:
• the Government’s Family Law Amendment Bill 2003,which the committee considered and supported;
• the Family Court’s Case Management Directions;
• the draft Children’s Services Regulations;
• the proposed service agreements and practicestandards to be implemented by the NSW Legal AidCommission in respect of children’s care andprotection panels; and
• a discussion paper issued by Legal Aid NSW regardingthe implementation of a Family Court ChildRepresentation Panel of legal representatives,including counsel.
At the time of writing, the committee was preparingsubmissions in response to the CommonwealthGovernment’s inquiry into child custody arrangements.That inquiry will consider the controversial topic ofwhether residence disputes should be resolved under theFamily Law Act from a starting point that involves a rebuttable presumption of parents sharing residence of a child.
Family Law Committee
The committee has also participated in submissions madeby the Law Council’s Family Law Section, regarding the newdraft rules under consideration by the Family Court. Thisformidable task involves the revision of practice andprocedure contained in more than 600 pages of text.
Throughout 2002-2003 the Family Law Committee hasprovided delegates to serve on committees and to representthe Bar Association at conferences. Some of these included:
• The NSW Legal Aid Commission’s Care andProtection Panel Selection Committee; and
• The Family Court’s ongoing Case ManagementCommittee.
Robert Lethbridge SC also represented the Bar at a two-day forum convened by the Attorney-General inCanberra entitled ‘Out of the maze: Steps towards anintegrated family law system’.
As this report was being prepared, the committee wasworking with the Professional Development Department inconvening a seminar on 6 August 2003 ‘Advocacy in theFamily Court, Practical Aspects’ at which justices O’Ryanand Rose are to speak.
Regardless of the reforms being considered, the FamilyCourt remains grossly under resourced, resulting inunacceptable delays nationally. At the time this report waswritten, the Sydney Registry was without a senior registrarand without funding to replace that officer. The seniorregistrar in recent years has had a significant caseload ofurgent and interim hearings dealing with parenting andmaintenance matters. Experience has demonstrated thatoften the need for expeditious access to a duty judicial
officer of the Family Court is at its highest whenfamilies initially break up. Children are otherwisesubjected to all the unsatisfactory risks of parentswho cannot agree on arrangements for their careor finances.
It is regrettable that government does notrecognise the need for funding of this importantrole in circumstances where the Family Court’sjudicial resources simply cannot provide for thisduty work without further delays in the defendedhearings list. This is particularly so in Sydney,where the Federal Magistrates Court does not haveany magistrates sitting in the jurisdiction.
It is to be hoped that the Commonwealth willrecognise an imperative to act promptly in makingappointments as judges retire and maintain acommitment to appointing judges as required.
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During 2002-2003 the Criminal Law Committee hasmade a particular effort to take a more proactive role whenresponding to proposed changes in the criminal law, at boththe state and federal level.
Between August 2002 and early 2003, the committee wasactive in making representations to the Department ofCorrective Services regarding such issues as prisonconditions, availability of services, legal access, securityclearances and mobile phones.
In October, representations were made to the New SouthWales Government regarding the Crimes (SentencingProcedure) Amendment (Standard Minimum Sentencing)Bill. Changes were made to the legislation to meet some, butnot all, of the concerns of the legal profession.
In December 2002, a detailed submission was preparedin respect of the Report on child sexual assaultprosecutions by the NSW Legislative Council’s StandingCommittee on Law and Justice. The Bar Associationsupported the establishment of a pilot project to trial
special procedures for such prosecutions, but opposed anumber of recommendations for substantial amendment ofthe Evidence Act. The government has proceeded with apilot project, but without any statutory changes.
In February 2003, an extensive submission, written byMark Buscombe and Richard Button, was prepared inrespect of the review of the law of manslaughter,particularly in relation to unborn children.
A lengthy submission was prepared by Peter Johnson SCin respect of possible amendments to sec 128 of the EvidenceAct 1995 and sec 33AA of the Coroners Act 1980.
Since the state election, legislative activity hasdiminished in the area of criminal justice, although thecommittee has made submissions on a number of changes inrespect of bail law.
Criminal Law Committee
Personal Injuries Litigation Committee
The Personal Injuries Litigation Committee remainedactive on many fronts during another busy and difficultyear. The introduction of the Civil Liability Amendment(Personal Responsibility) Bill 2002 brought with it the needfor urgent consideration of its restrictive provisions. Thecommittee, as it did when the earlier Civil Liability Bill waspending, assembled arguments and points for discussion,which were drawn upon by the President in negotiationswith, and submissions to, the state government.
Against the backdrop of the 2002 civil liabilitylegislation, consideration was given to the Ipp Committee’srecommendations. The Personal Injuries LitigationCommittee considered that if legislation is to be uniformthroughout Australia, as it should be, the New South Walesexample of excepting personal injury cases from the conceptof proportionate judgments (in line with the Ipp Committeerecommendations) should be followed. The Bar Associationmade a submission to the Law Council of Australia toconsider while it was finalising its policy paper onproportionate liability. This paper was subsequently sentby the Law Council to a meeting of the Insurance MinistersCouncil held on 4 April 2003 and the State-CommonwealthAttorneys-General (SCAG) meeting on 10 April 2003.
The committee liaised with the Law Council with respectto Australian Taxation Office Draft Taxation Ruling TR2002/D13. The ruling proposed to make personal injurycompensation scheme payments more comprehensivelytaxable. Given that the taxation of statutory compensationpayments does not seem open to much change, this led on toa larger and more important issue: namely, the work of theProductivity Commission, which is in effect revisiting theidea of a national compensation scheme. A detailed draftsubmission prepared by the committee (substantially by JimGracie) was approved by the Bar Council and sent to theProductivity Commission.
In the area of workers compensation, the committeefinalised a submission in respect of loadings on counsels’fees in the Compensation Court. It also monitored theprogress of the two appeals (Carey and Fuentes) in theCourt of Appeal, with approaches to Allen Robertson SCwho initially agreed to appear for the appellants andassisted with the early stages of the preparation of thewritten submissions (ultimately finalised by the Presidentwhen Robertson was forced out of the appeals throughconflicting commitments) and Stephen Gaegler SC who ledRoss Goodridge and Jeremy Kirk upon the appeals.Although the appeals were not successful, a substantialeffort was made and a debt of gratitude is owed particularly
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Personal Injuries Litigation Committee - continued
to Robertson SC, the President, Gaegler SC and Kirk. Most recently it came to the attention of the committee thatthe Hon MJR Clarke QC has been appointed to chairmeetings involving representatives of the WorkCoverAuthority and the Law Society to consider the undoubtedlyunsatisfactory present arrangements in respect of legal feesin the Workers Compensation Commission, which as of 19 December 2003 will be the sole tribunal for workerscompensation litigation. The existing arrangements makeno provision for counsel’s fees as a separate item and thestark reality is that if counsel are to be retained, the limitedremuneration that is available must be shared betweencounsel and solicitor. The far-reaching difficulties andpotential difficulties here are obvious. The PersonalInjuries Litigation Committee prepared a submission aboutthe desirability of fees for counsel in a reform of the costsstructure, which was approved by the Bar Council and hasbeen submitted.
In the area of motor vehicle accidents, detaileddiscussion at committee meetings took place about the list ofClaims Assessment and Resolution Service (CARS)assessors to be appointed or re-appointed. Andrew Stone,the Bar Association’s representative on the Motor AccidentsCouncil, took up those issues. The chief concerns are ofcourse delay in the provision of certificates, a matter towhich the efficiency of assessors in getting out their reportsand certificates is very relevant, and uniformity andreasonableness of approach in the formulation of opinionsin that regard. A submission was prepared seeking parallelamendments to the Supreme and District Court Acts inrelation to interim damages, which would allow them to beawarded in motor accident cases. This was essentially thework of Phillip Mahony and Andrew Morrison SC. The submission was approved by the Bar Council and hasbeen put in. Consideration was also given to ways toovercome the unsatisfactory situation created by thedecision in Fender v Power Coal, but final deliberations inthat regard were deferred in the hope that the decision of
the Court of Appeal in State of New South Wales v Rileymight solve the problem. It was noted, however, that theargument in that case was such that it might well be decidedon grounds that made it unnecessary to deal with thequestion of whether the need to give notices under themotor accidents legislation – whereupon the facts the claiminvolves a ‘motor accident’ – is really jurisdictional. So itturned out: the Court of Appeal decided Riley without theneed to consider this point. See [2003] NSWCA 208. Thecommittee will return to the Fender problem, but with thepassage of time it may recede in importance.
The above is a brief account of the activities of thecommittee during the preceding year in respect of the majoritems of business. A number of lesser items were discussedand attended to.
Throughout 2002/2003 the Personal Injuries LitigationCommittee met regularly, as it has done in the past. Thecommittee is a busy one and regrettably operates in an areain which successes on behalf of the Bar Association as awhole are few, given the nature of prevailing governmentpolicy. Nonetheless, members may be assured that thecommittee will continue its efforts and will welcomeenquiries, submissions and information from members ofthe association and respond to them. In this connection it isof course through the efforts of individual members of thecommittee that it functions and the performance of themembers has been significant. Justine Hall of Dibbs BarkerGosling remains a valued member representing the LawSociety and Andrew Stone has continued in thecorresponding role, but has also spread his wings as theBar’s representative on the Motor Accidents Council.
The committee has been ably assisted and complementedby Kim Nichols, who as always attended every meeting,took the minutes, and prepared advance agendas as well ascirculating a large number of documents to members of thecommittee, the contents of which she was always familiarwith. Once more the committee is greatly indebted to her.
Legal Aid Committee
The Legal Aid Committee held no formal meetings duringthe 2002-2003 reporting year. Nevertheless, the committeecontinues to enjoy an excellent ongoing relationship withthe NSW Legal Aid Commission; a factor that is onlyreinforced by the presence of Geoff Lindsay SC on theBoard of the Legal Aid Commission.
Consultations between the Chairman of the Legal AidCommittee and the commission have been both informaland productive, with many concerns, such as fee rises forcounsel, being addressed in 2002-2003.
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Mediation Committee
The Mediation Committee is responsible for aspects ofmediation of interest and importance to the Bar. The Mediation Committee’s objectives for 2002-2003 were:
• the education of the Bar as counsel representingparties at mediation;
• the education of the Bar as mediators;
• the promotion of barristers to users of mediationservices to represent parties at mediation;
• the promotion of barristers as mediators to users ofmediation services;
• nomination to Bar Council of barristers for the BarAssociation’s panel of mediators;
• liaison with, and development of good relations with,the Dispute Resolution Committee of the Law Society of NSW;
• observing compulsory mediation under Practice Note118 (the Supreme Court’s Practice Note describing how it will exercise its power to order proceedings into mediation); and
• making constructive suggestions to the court on theimplementation of Practice Note 118 and on themethods to be used by registrars in consideringwhether to refer proceedings to mediation.
The education of the Bar as counsel representingparties at mediation and the education of the Bar as mediators
As noted in last year’s report, the Mediation Committeeis of the view that, before it can be effective in its efforts topromote barristers as mediators and as advocates atmediation, more barristers need to be trained in mediationskills. This year - perhaps appropriately for the first year ofcontinuing professional development - the focus of thecommittee’s activities has been on education of the Bar.
Members of the committee have agreed to prepare aseries of articles for Bar Brief on different aspects ofmediation; a publishing timetable has been agreed on; andseveral articles have been published. In addition, the Chairpublished an article in Bar News (Winter 2003) discussingwhether court-ordered mediation is desirable.
The highlight of the year probably was the committee’spresentation of two successful CPD seminars,‘Representing clients at mediation’ (5 March 2003) and‘Court-ordered mediation: An oxymoron?’ (11 June 2003).Both seminars were very well-attended.
Nomination to Bar Council of barristers for the BarAssociation’s panel of mediators
The Bar’s criteria for selecting barristers for the BarAssociation’s panel of mediators require training andexperience at mediation, and compliance with the SupremeCourt’s Practice Note 102. The panel is recommended to theSupreme Court and the District Court as part of their listsof mediators, and is intended to be used when those courtsorder that a matter be referred to mediation. The amountof work required both of Bar Association staff and ofMediation Committee members in soliciting, processing andconsidering applications for the panel has been a matter ofconcern to the committee.
For the last two years, the committee has been leadingthe Bar Association’s efforts to assist in the preparation ofa draft protocol for the appointment of mediators by theSupreme Court. The protocol now forms part of a packageof proposals in relation to mediation referral, includinglegislative amendments. The court advises that the Billshould be presented to parliament by the end of September.
If the court adopts the protocol, it probably will dispensewith its existing (long) list of mediators and, instead, whenreferring proceedings to mediation, will refer the selectionof the mediator to the Bar Association, the Law Society orone of several ADR organisations. Bar Council hasauthorised the President to propose the same arrangementto the Chief Judge of the District Court.
Liaison with, and development of good relations with,the Law Society of NSW
The Committee hosted a successful informal get-together with members of the Law Society’s DisputeResolution Committee. Further liaison with this committeeand with other organisations involved in mediation arebeing planned.
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Professional Indemnity Committee
Since its formation in May 2000, the major activity ofthe Professional Indemnity Insurance Committee has beento negotiate on behalf of the Bar the professionalindemnity policies.
For 2003-2004 indemnity insurance has been offered byfour brokers:
• Aon Risk Services Australia Limited;
• Heath Lambert Professional Indemnity Pty Limited;
• Suncorp Metway Insurance Limited; and
• Willis Australia Limited.
The committee is pleased that it now has four players inthe market creating increased competition, which shouldresult in competitive premiums being offered.
With the exception of the Aon insurance, which wasquoted and available from mid-June, the other insuranceswere approved in mid-April and were quoted and availablefrom May. This was a vast improvement from last year whenthe policies in the main were not quoted and available untilmid June. That was largely due to indecision on the part ofinsurers as to whether they would participate in ourmarket. That indecision seems to have dissipated. Becauseof arrangements put in place earlier in 2002, the ExecutiveDirector of the Bar Association and the ProfessionalIndemnity Insurance Committee were able to begindiscussions with the brokers in late 2002 concerning thepolicy wordings for 2003-2004.
The final wordings for all but one insurer were submittedto the Attorney General for his approval under sec 38R ofthe Legal Profession Act 1987 in early April which was amonth earlier than in 2002. The Heath Lambert policywording was approved on 13 April and the Suncorp andWillis policies were approved on 22 April. The delay withthe Aon policy was due to discussions concerning itswording. It was finally approved by the Attorney Generalon 6 June. The early approval of the policies gave memberssufficient time to arrange their insurance well before therenewal of practising certificates.
As with last year’s policies, each of the approvals wasconditional upon the insurer agreeing to provideinformation to the Executive Director on an anonymisedbasis concerning the insurance placed and claimsexperience. The Bar Association has since received datafrom each insurer which is being collated. This data (in aform which does not identify barristers, claimants orinsurers) will be made available to the insurance marketand it is expected that this will enable insurers to makemore informed and realistic risk and premiumassessments. The Bar Association now has reliablestatistics available concerning the claims experience ofNSW barristers which goes back to the date whenprofessional indemnity insurance became compulsory inNSW for barristers (1 July 1995). This is a significantachievement and will also assist greatly with the BarAssociation’s ongoing risk management strategies.
Bar Association Human Rights Coordinator
Nicholas Cowdery AM QC is the Bar Association’sHuman Rights Coordinator. His role is to advise the BarCouncil - with the assistance, where appropriate, of otherswho have volunteered to help - on issues that have humanrights implications. He also acts as a liaison point for theBar Association with other organisations involved in theprotection and enforcement of human rights under a justrule of law.
Most of the work is in the preparation for the Presidentof comments or advice, correspondence, submissions andreports on relevant domestic and international humanrights issues affecting the legal profession and theadministration of the law, as they arise.
From time to time it is suggested that the Human RightsCoordinator should become more actively involved in themonitoring of human rights abuses domestically andinternationally and in active intervention (by missions andobservations) when they occur. The present role of thecoordinator is more narrow, reflecting the state jurisdictionof the Bar Association itself. There are also significantresource implications (human and financial) for a wider role.
All members are asked to report to the Bar Associationany cases of human rights infringements where it may beappropriate for the Bar Council to act. It should be notedthat these do not normally include cases of the regularpursuit of legally enforceable remedies.
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
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Reports Promoting access to justice
The schemeThe New South Wales Bar Association’s Legal Assistance
Referral Scheme (LARS) aims to provide legal assistancefor free or at reduced rates to persons who would otherwisenot be able to obtain legal assistance without sufferingsevere financial hardship. As such, it embodies and reflectsthe strongly held view of the profession that a person’srights and access to justice should not be diminishedbecause of indigence.
Despite the considerable amount of assistance providedthrough LARS, the scheme represents only a portion of thepro bono work customarily carried out on an informal basisby members of the Bar (see diagram below).
The Bar Association’s Legal Assistance Department runsLARS, with the majority of funding for the administrativesupport provided by the Public Purpose Fund. Since the scheme’s inception, barristers have contributedapproximately 20,000 work hours.
EligibilityThe scheme has in place a set of strict criteria
for determining an applicant’s eligibility for assistance. For example, personal injury, medical negligence,neighbourhood disputes and Apprehended Violence Ordersare excluded from the scheme. Further, LARS will notconsider matters refused assistance by other legal assistanceproviders due to a lack of legal merit. The income thresholdfor applicants has been quantified at a gross income notexceeding $1000 per week.
Further information about applicants’ obligations, aswell as the nature and criteria for grants of assistance maybe obtained from the Bar Association’s web site under‘Legal Assistance’.
Once an applicant has financially qualified forassistance, an attempt is made to refer the matter to abarrister for an assessment of the legal merit on a no-feebasis. After the provision of the initial advice, if furtherlegal services are recommended, the applicant may dealwith the barrister on one of the following bases:
• the barrister may accept the matter on a speculativebasis where the applicant only pays on a successfuloutcome, and/or the establishment of a costs entitlement,and/or the actual recovery of costs from the other party;
• the barrister may agree to accept the matter on areduced fee basis;
• the barrister may agree to accept the matter for a feenegotiated at market rates; or
• the barrister may accept the matter for no fee, regardlessof the outcome (and hence in the event of success, wouldnot be seeking a costs order which includes payment ofany fee to the barrister)
A review of the scheme’s activities in 2001 - 2002LARS received nearly 600 enquiries about legal assistance
and related matters. Many enquiries were made by personsvisiting (unannounced) the Bar Association’s office.
During the reporting year, 358 formal applications forassistance were received and processed. This is a 32 percent increase over the previous year. Of these applications,189 were eligible under the scheme’s guidelines for referralto a barrister. All applications, whether ultimately referredor not, involve considerable time and resources in theirassessment. The breakdown of those applications notreferred to barristers is set out in the accompanying tables.
Analysis of the 2002-2003 statistics reveals the followingpoints:
• Applications in the High Court increased by 600 percent. The majority of these matters were in the court’soriginal jurisdiction relating to immigration.
• Applications in the Supreme Court of New SouthWales increased by 30 per cent, despite the existenceof a court-appointed pro bono scheme. This followson from the 250 per cent increase in last year’sfigures.
• 290 of the 358 applications to the scheme were refusedby Legal Aid as being outside its guidelines.
• At the time this report was prepared, there were 32ongoing matters and 36 pending referral, awaitingfurther information.
• There were two complaints made by applicantsdissatisfied with the manner in which the scheme dealtwith their matters. Each of these complaints wassatisfactorily resolved.
Case studies• A judge in the Industrial Relations Commission of New
South Wales referred a young man to the scheme inrelation to his action in constructive dismissal. He wasalso claiming that the firm had breached his copyright ona book he had written and published. The matter wasreferred to a retired judge who attempted to settle thematter. Before agreement could be reached, thecompany was placed in receivership. The matter wasthen referred to a barrister specialising in company law.As a result of that advice, the retired judge accompaniedthe applicant (who lived in Albury) to a meeting with thereceiver in Sydney. Settlement negotiations weresuccessful.
• The Shopfront Legal Centre at Kings Cross referred ayoung mother who was appealing a decision of amagistrate in the Local Court (Family Matters). After acontested hearing, a residence order for her four yearold daughter, with a speech disability, was made infavour of the child’s father and paternal grandmother.
Legal Assistance Referral SchemeFor the year ended 30 June 2003
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The father and paternal grandmother lived in northernNew South Wales, making access for the mother anddaughter very difficult. The Salvation Army supportedthe young mother in coping with the separation from herchild. Legal Aid was refused on merit but the solicitor atthe legal centre was committed to the merits of the case.The matter was referred to a barrister who representedthe mother in a five day hearing in the Family Court forno fee. A decision was handed down overturning thedecision of the magistrate.
• A solicitor from mid-north Queensland contacted thescheme in relation to a young woman, who, afterseparation, had not seen her three children for twoyears. The children were living with their father incentral New South Wales.
There were also property settlement complications.Legal Aid Queensland would not assist in the contactissues until the property settlement had been dealt within New South Wales. Legal aid in New South Wales wasalso refused for contact for the same reason. The matterwas referred to a barrister who made an applicationbefore a federal magistrate at Parramatta for contact onan interim basis. The application was successful and themother travelled from Queensland for a four-day staywith the children in central NSW. Subsequently adifferent barrister continued in the matter and wassuccessful in obtaining consent orders giving the mothermore regular contact, taking into account thegeographical difficulties.
• A small businessman, in financial difficulty, fromcountry New South Wales contacted the schemeregarding to charges which had been laid against him byWorkCover in relation to an employee who had beenstabbed with a syringe in a robbery at the businessman’sshop. A barrister appeared on his behalf in a two dayhearing in the Chief Industrial Magistrate’s Court. Themagistrate convicted the company but accepted thebarrister’s submissions that to convict the ownerpersonally would be double jeopardy. The magistrateimposed the minimum penalty.
• A distressed member of the public contacted the schemein relation to a forthcoming coronial inquest into thedeath of her brother. After significant preparation, thebarrister appeared in a four day hearing. The inquestwas able to explain the circumstances of the death, whichhad occurred at a psychiatric hospital in Sydney. Thecoroner made recommendations, which have beenaccepted by the Department of Health, as to proceduresto be followed in similar circumstances. In his verdict,the coroner noted that he was grateful for the assistancehe had received from the scheme.
Volunteers encouragedThe Manager of the scheme spoke to readers at the
bi-annual Bar Practice courses. The President and theExecutive Director, by circular and personal representation,have also encouraged members to participate in all schemesadministered by the Bar Association.
Barristers’ Referral ServiceThe Barristers’ Referral Service is aimed at addressing
the increasing number of requests to the Bar Association forassistance in obtaining the services of a barrister. Theserequests have been directed to the association’s web siteunder ‘Find a barrister.’ The facility has been visitedapproximately 50,000 times over the last twelve months.This category of assistance is invaluable for manyapplicants who have not qualified for assistance throughLARS on financial grounds and can be referred to thisservice by staff of LARS. If access through the web site isnot possible, staff fax or post a list of barristers in therelevant area of practice.
Duty Barrister schemesThe Manager and staff of LARS manage the operation of
the Duty Barrister schemes which operate at the Local andDistrict courts at the Downing Centre and the AustralianIndustrial Relations Commission.
Barristers are rostered to attend each day at the courts.In May 2003 the President of the Bar Association called forfurther volunteers for the Duty Barrister Scheme, withpleasing results.
Court appointed pro bono schemesThe Manager of LARS is involved in the monitoring of
the court appointed legal assistance schemes in terms of dayto day queries which may arise. Barristers now support probono schemes in the Federal Court, Federal MagistratesCourt, Supreme Court, and District Court. Before herretirement, the Chief Judge of the Land and EnvironmentCourt of NSW, contacted the Executive Director of the BarAssociation with a view to setting up a pro bono scheme.The Executive Director has ongoing discussions withmembers of the judiciary and court staff in relation to theseschemes, which impose a significant burden on members ofthe Bar and Bar Association staff.
Interaction with other pro bono service providers
LARS works closely with the Law Society Pro BonoScheme. There is almost daily contact between the twoschemes. Not only does the Law Society refer mattersrequesting a barrister’s involvement, but also it is notuncommon for LARS to ask for the society’s help inobtaining the services of a solicitor on behalf of applicantswhere legal merit has been established.
LARS provided a placement for the Public InterestAdvocacy Centre Summer School where a student spenttime at the Bar Association’s office and met with a barristerwho had done work through the scheme.
Together with the Pro Bono Solicitor from the Law Society,the Manager of the scheme attended at LawAccess atParramatta and spoke to the enquiry officers about theguidelines of the scheme. The scheme’s Manager is also amember of the LawAccess NSW Operations Committee. TheExecutive Director of the Bar Association has also visited theLawAccess Parramatta office for familiarisation purposes.
Legal Assistance Referral Scheme - continued
Reports The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
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LawAccess NSW
An overview of the strategic and administrative changesbeing effected to facilitate the incorporation of thescheme into LawAccess
The number of formal referralsfrom LawAccess was not high.However, there was approximately a 32 per cent increase in the overallnumber of applications forassistance received by the scheme,which may be attributed to referrals not being specified ascoming from LawAccess. Administrative systems introducedby the Bar Association to cope with the increase in demand,such as the TRIM filing system, have been effective.
There have been many difficult phone calls, which maybe multiple calls from the one person, or from differentindividuals, which are dealt with by staff of the BarAssociation and LARS. Reception staff of the associationalso have to deal with the large increase in the number ofunrepresented litigants who are referred to the scheme by acourt (in spite of the existence of the court appointed probono schemes). There have been several unpleasant sceneswhere senior staff or security had to be involved.
The Bar Association continues to bear a significantportion of the costs for the administrative infrastructureneeded to support the operation of the scheme. Thestaffing component of this support, in terms of time andsalary, is significant.
Supreme Court Legal Assistance Scheme
Federal Court Legal Assistance Scheme
NSW Bar Association’s Legal Assistance Referral Scheme
District Court Legal Assistance Scheme
Federal Magistrate Court Legal Assistance Scheme
Duty Barrister Scheme Local, District Courts,
Downing Centre Sydney
Australian Industrial RelationsCommission Duty Barrister Scheme
Pro Bono work done by members of NSW Bar outside of these formal schemes
The New South WalesBar Association
‘Servants of all yet of none’
Pro bono schemes
High Court 2001-2002 2002-2003
Application for special leave 7 12
Original jurisdiction No data 29
Total 7 41
Federal Court 2001-2002 2002-2003
Full Bench appeals 7 8
Immigration 35 43
Veterans & Social Security entitlements - -
Industrial relations 2 -
Trade practices 3 6
Native title - 1
Bankruptcy 3 2
Total 50 60
Federal Magistrates Service 2001-2002 2002-2003
Discrimination n/a 1
Family law - access n/a 1
Family law - child support n/a 1
Family law - residency n/a 1
Total n/a 4
Supreme Court 2001-2002 2002-2003
Court of Appeal 8 4
Court of Criminal Appeal 7 11
Common Law 32 30
Equity 18 38
Criminal - 5
Commercial - -
Family provisions 2 3
Administrative 5 4
Defamation 3 1
Professional negligence 4 8
Total 79 104
Family Court of Australia 2001-2002 2002-2003
Full Bench appeals - 1
Access 9 4
Residence 11 17
Child support 4 1
Spousal maintenance 3 -
Property settlement - 8
Total 27 31
District Court 2001-2002 2002-2003
Criminal 11 8
Civil 25 30
Defamation - 2
Professional negligence - 1
De facto relationships - 2
Total 36 43
Local Court
Criminal 14 15
Civil 19 21
Family matters - access 1
Residency 1
Spousal maintenance 1
Prop. settlement 1
Child support 1 5
Total 38 41
Children’s Court 4 4
Coroner’s Court 2 2
Other courts 2001-2002 2002-2003
Land & Environment Court 4 6
NSW Industrial Relations Commission 7 6
Tribunal
AAT 5 6
ADT 11 2
Medical Tribunal 1 1
CTTT 3 7
Total 20 16
Referral source 2001-2002 2002-2003
Law Society Pro Bono Scheme 28 58
LawAccess 7
Instructing solicitor 30 51
Non-instructing solicitor 1 13
Judge 26 32
Member of Bar 14 19
Member of public 67 68
Registrar 12 9
Community legal centres 43 64
Member of Parliament 1 4
Legal Aid 13 20
A-G’s Department 3 2
Welfare/community groups 8 10
Web site approximately 1,500 visits
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Legal Assistance Referral Scheme statistics
Reports The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
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Legal Assistance Referral Scheme Statistics - continued
Client location 2001-2002 2002-2003
West 66 117
North 37 33
South 20 24
East 23 22
Country 49 58
Inner City 15 22
Central Coast 5 9
ACT
Interstate 11 11
Villawood Detention Centre 19 32
Port Hedland Detention Centre 3
Prison 35 27
Overseas 1
Type of work done 2001-2002 2002-2003
Merit assessment 150 153
Advice 46 61
Conferences 115 120
Appearances 53 60
Appearance @ hearing 48 62
Mediation - -
Other (including preparation of submissions) 4 6
Rejection / no action 2001-2002 2002-2003
Outside guidelines 35 62
Too late notification 5 8
No further information received 31 38
Referred to Law Society Pro Bono Scheme 15 27
Funded by Legal Aid 5 4
Referred to Community Legal Centre - 8
Briefed barrister privately - 7
Briefed solicitor privately - 5
Conflict of interest - 1
Matter settled 4 3
Subject to Federal Court Immigration Scheme 10 2
Subject to Federal Court Pro Bono Scheme 2 -
Required a migration agent - 1
Refused on a discretionary basis - 3
Turnaround time 2001-2002 2002-2003
Same day 23 11
Less than a week 49 33
1-2 weeks 42 52
2 weeks plus 38 57
Basis brief accepted 2001-2002 2001-2002
No fee - merit assessment 105 153
No fee - continuing involvement 67
Speculative 23 7
Reduced fee 24 25
Negotiated @ market rates 2
Refused legal aid on basis of 2001-2002 2001-2002
Merit 32 22
Financial 75 46
Outside guidelines 157 290
Legal merit
Yes 92 101
No 58 52
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
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Reports Questions as to professional conduct
Professional Conduct Department
The role of the department
The Professional Conduct Department facilitates theinvestigation and reporting to the Bar Council (the council)of conduct complaints against barristers referred to thecouncil by the Legal Services Commissioner or made by thecouncil itself. The department also performs this role inrespect of indictable offences, tax offences, acts ofbankruptcy and other notifiable events required to bedisclosed to the council under the Legal ProfessionRegulation 2002 (notification matters). The departmentprovides advice and policy support to the council in respectof the administration and carrying out of the council’sfunctions under Parts 3 and 10 of the Legal Profession Act1987 ( the Act), and the preparation of submissions togovernments on the disciplinary regime of the profession.One of the key objectives of the department is to promote abetter understanding of good client service andcommunication on the part of the Bar Association’smembers. Such an understanding has become imperative ifthe Bar is to flourish as a respected and efficient providerof legal services to the public. The department alsofacilitates the provision of advice to members on ethicalissues and responds, on a daily basis, to numerous inquiriesfrom the public about the Bar and the conduct ofbarristers.
It is important to appreciate that the Bar Council has astatutory obligation to deal with all complaints andnotification matters regarding barristers. This statutoryrole is monitored by the Legal Services Commissioner, anindependent statutory overseer of the council’s statutoryduties, and ultimately by the Attorney General.
Changes in the public’s expectations, combined with afailure by some barristers to act in accordance with theirprofessional standing, has brought barristers underparticularly close scrutiny by the government, theprofession and the community in the last few years.Currently, the Bar Association and the Legal ServicesCommissioner work cooperatively in the referral,investigation and review of disciplinary matters. Should thecurrent co-regulatory system not satisfy either theconsumers of legal services or the government, thealternative will be a completely government regulatedprofession. It is therefore in the members’ interest to workwith the department in the investigation of any complaint ornotification matter and to assist colleagues in practising asbarristers in such a way as to maintain the integrity of andpublic’s respect in the profession.
Workload and restructure of the Professional ConductDepartment
The financial year ended 30 June 2003 saw a continuedincrease in the work of the department. Although there hasbeen a pleasing reduction in the number of conductcomplaints and notification matters compared to theprevious year, the time spent by the department in handling
complaints against barristers referred by the Bar Council tothe Administrative Decisions Tribunal, arising fromconduct complaints made in previous years as well as in thecurrent year, and defending appeals made by barristersagainst decisions of the council to cancel or refuse to issue apractising certificate has greatly increased.
The Professional Conduct Department has beenrestructured to cater for this increase in its workload,particularly in the handling of tribunal matters andSupreme Court litigation. Two new staff appointments weremade during the year. Anne Sinclair was appointed DeputyDirector, Professional Conduct in January 2003. Annebrings with her extensive litigation experience and strongmanagement skills gained in private practice and as in-house counsel. In June 2003 Anne was appointed Director,Professional Conduct following Terrie Gibson’s departureto Dublin. Adele Connor, formerly a senior litigation lawyerwith the Australian Government Solicitor, was appointedDeputy Director, Professional Conduct in March 2003.Adele replaced Liz Maconachie who left the Bar Associationin December 2002. The association is grateful to Liz for herwork and dedication during her time with the association.During the year, Helen Barrett (formerly Director,Professional Conduct) resumed full time work with thedepartment and continues in her position as DeputyDirector, Professional Conduct.
The restructure of the department and significantchanges implemented to its procedures and policies reflect amove towards the department undertaking work previouslybriefed out to external solicitors, particularly in regard tocomplaints referred by the Bar Council to theAdministrative Decisions Tribunal. This is subject toretaining external solicitors as and when required,depending on the status of matters and other commitmentsof the department.
The department reviewed all applications for renewal ofpractising certificates to identify any issues relating toconduct or discipline and to ensure these were actioned.Further, in some cases where barristers had failed tocomplete 10 points of continuing professional development,practising certificates were issued subject to conditionsrequiring the outstanding points be completed by a certaindate and that a statutory declaration be submitted. Thedepartment monitors compliance with these conditions aswell as compliance by barristers who have financialmanagement and in some cases medical reporting conditionsattached to their practising certificates.
The department has also given extensive support to theExecutive Director and the Bar Council in the developmentof and submissions on policy relating to the change oflegislation of the profession. During the year, the Director,Professional Conduct, Terrie Gibson played a key role inprojects of critical importance to the New South Walescomplaints and discipline regime and the proposed nationalpractice regime. The council express their gratitude and
Reports The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
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Professional Conduct Department - continued
appreciation to Terrie Gibson for her hard work,commitment and dedication. Terrie also implementedsignificant changes to procedures and policies regulating thework of the department as well as the professional conductcommittees and these have proved highly beneficial.
In the financial year 30 June 2002, 40 conductcomplaints were referred by the Legal ServicesCommissioner to the council for investigation, and 15complaints were made by the council pursuant to sec 134 ofthe Act. Thirty-two notifications were made to the councilpursuant to the requirements for disclosure of notifiableevents under the Legal Profession Regulation 2002(Regulation). Of the 32 notifications, 24 related toindictable offences, tax offences and acts of bankruptcy inrelation to which the council is required to make adetermination as to a barrister’s fitness and propriety tohold a practising certificate under Part 3 Div1AA of theAct. The categories of conduct complaints and notificationsand other statistical information are set out at the end ofthis report.
In the 12 months to June 2003, four professional conductcommittees met either fortnightly or monthly throughoutthe year to investigate complaints about conduct andnotification matters.
Significant cases
The conduct of some former barristers, particularly in relation to tax and bankruptcy matters, has continuedto raise public concerns regarding the integrity of the profession.
On 10 October 2002, the Bar Council resolved pursuantto sec 39FC and sec 38FD of the Act to cancel the practisingcertificate of Clarence James Stevens QC. The councilconsidered that the two tax offences notified by Stevens offailing to lodge tax returns for 1999 and 2000 werecommitted in circumstances that show he is not a fit andproper person to hold a practising certificate. In making itsdetermination, the council had regard to the fact thatStevens had failed to lodge returns and pay tax over 20years between 1976 and 1996.
Stevens appealed against this decision to the SupremeCourt. On 2 December 2002, Justice Greg James granted astay of the cancellation of Stevens’ practising certificate.On 24 April 2003, the Court of Appeal allowed an appealby the Bar Council against the stay granted by Justice GregJames. A subsequent application by Stevens for specialleave to appeal to the High Court was refused on 9 May2003 and his practising certificate was cancelled from 5 pmthat day.
In New South Wales Bar Association v Stevens [2003]NSWCA 95, it was argued on behalf of Stevens in theCourt of Appeal that the Bar Council, in deciding to cancelStevens’ practising certificate, should have confined itsconsideration to the specific circumstances in which thetwo tax offences were committed. The court referred to thedetermination the council must make under sec38FC(1)(b) as to fitness and propriety and noted this
necessarily requires consideration of the ‘full range ofrelevant circumstances’.
The Court of Appeal found that the protection of thepublic and the maintenance of the reputation of the legalprofession are entitled to determinative weight in theexercise of the court’s discretion to grant a stay, finding it ofsignificance that the council has instituted proceedings tohave Stevens’ name removed from the Roll of LegalPractitioners. Where such proceedings can be seen to havesubstantial prospects of success, the court found it shouldbe slow to exercise its discretion in such a way as to permitStevens to continue in practice pending the determinationof those proceedings. The court emphasised the scheme ofregulation imposed by Part 3 Division 1AA of the Act isdesigned to protect the public and that this is of centralsignificance. The court further noted that the very seniorityof Stevens exacerbates the adverse effect of his conduct onthe reputation of the profession.
The Bar Council’s application to have Stevens’ nameremoved from the Roll of Legal Practitioners is listed forhearing from 9 to 12 September 2003.
In another important recent decision involving failure tolodge tax returns and pay tax, the Court of Appeal deliveredits judgment in NSW Bar Association v Young [2003]NSWCA 228 on 19 August 2003. Andrew Hamilton Youngdid not file income tax returns from 1980 to 1996 and did notpay any income tax from 1980 to 2000. The court referred toa submission put on behalf of Young that he was not involvedin any professional misconduct and to various other mattersput in his favour, but found that those matters do notderogate from the fact that Young’s failure to file income taxreturns for years is incompatible with that degree ofintegrity which the public has the right to expect in abarrister. The court declared that Young is not a fit andproper person to remain on the Roll of Legal Practitionersand ordered his name be removed from the Roll.
These and other important decisions are available on theassociation’s web site through a hotlink to the judgmentsunder the heading ‘Professional Conduct Department’.
During the course of the year, the AdministrativeDecisions Tribunal delivered decisions in 13 mattersinvolving barristers. In two separate decisions in Howen,the tribunal found Alexander Stanislaw Howen guilty ofprofessional misconduct for failure to comply with a noticeissued pursuant to sec 152 of the Act without reasonablecause. The importance of responding to sec 152 notices isreferred to in the section ‘Responding to complaints’ below.
Decisions of the Legal Services Division of the tribunalare also hotlinked on the association’s web site. Hearings inrelation to professional misconduct matters are held inpublic. Any decisions relating to unsatisfactory professionalconduct (as opposed to professional misconduct) are heardin camera but are generally published on the making of anadverse finding against the barrister by the tribunal.
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Professional Conduct Department - continued
Listing on the web site of recent Bar Council, tribunaland court decisions
Pursuant to amendments to the Act which came intoforce on 4 October 2002, under sec 171LB the Bar Councilmust publicise disciplinary action taken against a barristerincluding the name and other identifying details of theperson against whom the disciplinary action was taken .Under sec 171LC of the Act, the Legal ServicesCommissioner must keep a register of disciplinary actiontaken against barristers which is to be made available forpublic inspection on the Internet. The commissioner isrequired to identify the name of the person against whomdisciplinary action was taken and to provide particulars ofthe action taken. Disciplinary action includes any decisionto suspend, cancel or refuse to issue a practising certificateand any orders of the Administrative Decisions Tribunalfollowing a finding of unprofessional conduct orprofessional misconduct.
Ethical advice for members
The Bar Council neither provides ‘ethical rulings’ noradvice to members. Rather, it facilitates the provision ofassistance to members on ethical matters by referring theinquiring member to a silk on one of the professionalconduct committees. Should the member require a recordof the advice to be kept, that member should record to thesilk, in writing, the facts and circumstances which led to thegiving of advice. A copy of that letter should also beprovided to the Director, Professional Conduct. Thedepartment’s staff are able to provide the name andtelephone numbers of senior members of committees whoare able to give ethical advice and guidance.
Responding to complaints
Members the subject of a complaint are urged to obtainindependent advice before responding to any complaint orcorrespondence from the Professional Conduct Departmentor the Legal Services Commissioner. Advice may beavailable through a professional indemnity insurer’ssolicitors but, if not, then a silk (who is not a member of aprofessional conduct committee or council) should beapproached for advice. Most professional indemnitypolicies require a barrister to notify his or her insurer onreceipt of a complaint.
The policy of the Bar Council is to require a barrister topersonally sign any correspondence responding to enquiriesfrom the Professional Conduct Department. Extensions oftime will be granted for replies to complaints if such a needis established but the council expects barristers to givepriority to responding to conduct complaints.
Members served with a notice pursuant to sec 152 of theAct to provide information and furnish documentsnecessary for the investigation of a conduct complaint madeagainst them must respond to such notices promptly. Abarrister who fails to comply with a sec 152 notice, withoutreasonable cause, is guilty of professional misconduct undersec 152(4) of the Act. Such failure can lead to the Bar
Council making a further complaint against the barristerwhich may ultimately be referred to the AdministrativeDecisions Tribunal. A number of decisions of the tribunalavailable on the association’s web site concern failure torespond to sec 152 notices.
Recommended reading for any barrister against whom acomplaint is made is listed on the association’s web site.
Community and academic members
Each of the investigating professional conductcommittees has been privileged to have as participants bothacademic and community representative members.
The Bar Council and the association express theirgratitude to all community and academic members. Theircontribution is very important to maintaining the quality ofthe Bar’s complaint handling process. All have beenenthusiastic participants in its deliberations and theirinsight is greatly appreciated.
PCC#1 community members are Susanne Weress andKate Nacard. Associate Professor Jill Hunter from theUniversity of New South Wales is the academicrepresentative on that committee.
Professor David Barker, Dean of the Faculty of Law atthe University of Technology, is the academic representativeon PCC#2. John Blount, Matthew Smith, Anna Fader andSue Thaler all continued to serve as communityrepresentatives on PCC#2.
This year the community representatives on PCC#3 were John White, Nicholle Nobel, Helen Steptoe andRobert Nakhla. Bernard Dunne from the Faculty of Law atthe University of Sydney is the academic representative onthat committee.
Francine Feld from the Faculty of Law, University ofWestern Sydney continued as PCC#4’s academic member.Professor Derek Anderson, Phil Marchionni and CarolRandell continued as community members.
Barrister members
The Bar Council and the Professional ConductDepartment again express their appreciation to all thebarrister members of the professional conduct committees.All have devoted many hours of their time on a voluntarybasis. Their service demonstrates the continuedcommitment of the profession to ensuring complaintsregarding the conduct of barristers are fully investigatedand appropriate disciplinary action taken in the interests ofmaintaining public confidence in the profession. Theparticipation of the barrister members in this process isvital to setting and maintaining appropriate standards. Thework of barrister members in this area is highly valued.
Committee workload
Notification matters
In the financial year to 30 June 2003, a total of 32notifications were made by 29 barristers. Twenty-four
About us The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
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Professional Conduct Department - continued
notifications related to indictable offences, tax offences andacts of bankruptcy requiring the Bar Council to make adetermination under Part 3 Div 1AA of the Act. Adetermination under sec 38FC of the Act must be made bythe council within three months of the date on whichnotification is given to the council. An extension of onemonth can be sought from the Legal Services Commissioner.The professional conduct committees reported to thecouncil on a total of 28 notifications, eight of which weregiven to the council late in the previous year.
Conduct complaints
Fifty-five new conduct complaints were referred to theprofessional conduct committees for investigation from 1 July 2002 to 30 June 2003. During the year, the committeesinvestigated and reported to the Bar Council in respect of 21of the new conduct complaints, in addition to a further 40complaints carried forward from the previous year. Of thetotal of 61 complaints dealt with by the council during theyear, 33 complaints were dismissed pursuant to sec 155(4) ofthe Act on the basis that there was no reasonable likelihoodthat the Administrative Decisions Tribunal would make afinding of unsatisfactory professional conduct orprofessional misconduct. Six complaints were withdrawnbut the council made a fresh complaint in relation to one ofthese. Six complaints have been referred to the tribunal forhearing and determination. Of the 33 dismissed complaints,six complaints have been the subject of an application forreview. The Legal Services Commissioner has upheld thecouncil’s decisions in four matters. No determination has yetbeen made in relation to the other two matters under review.
Statistical information collated from the council’sinvestigation of complaints is set out in tables at the end ofthis report. The information is provided in accordance withsec 171MB of the Act.
It should also be noted that PCC#2 alone considersapplications for admission or re-admission of legalpractitioners which are usually made by way of anapplication to the Legal Practitioners’ Admission Board(LPAB) under sec 13 of the Act. The committee, havingconsidered the application, makes a recommendation to theBar Council to oppose or not oppose the application. TheLPAB is advised of the council’s resolution which itconsiders prior to coming to its own conclusion as towhether the applicant should be admitted as a legalpractitioner. Both the Bar Council and the Law SocietyCouncil make recommendations to the LPAB about certainclasses of applications.
The educative value of the committee’s work
The following aspects of a barrister’s practice have beenidentified, via the complaints investigation process, asrecurring problem areas.
• Direct access matters
Rules 74, 75, 76, 77 and 80 of the New South WalesBarristers’ Rules are particularly relevant in direct accessbrief matters. The absence of a solicitor to file and servedocuments necessitates more vigilance on the part of the
barrister to ensure that the client or some other person filesand serves court documents. The New South WalesBarristers’ Rules are on the association’s web site.
Sections 175 and 176 of the Act prescribe the differentdisclosure relating to costs required to be made to clients indirect access matters and to an instructing solicitor.
Direct access matters demand direct, effective and timelycommunication with clients about the nature of the work thebarrister is able to perform, and what work might be betterperformed by a solicitor in light of the client’s expectations.The Bar Council urges barristers undertaking direct accesswork to confirm in writing all telephone conversations withthe client and all matters which are discussed in conference.Discussions with opponents should also be communicated tothe client. Communication (whether oral or written) needsto be clear and expressed in plain language to avoid thepossibility of misunderstandings arising.
• Practising without a practising certificate
Sections 25, 48B and 48C of the Act provide thatbarristers must not practise as or hold themselves out as abarrister without being the holder of a current practisingcertificate. The word ‘practise’ includes any of the activitiesreferred to in Rule 74 of the New South Wales Barristers’Rules. The meaning of ‘practise’ is not limited to advocacyand includes negotiation, representing a client in amediation, giving legal advice (chamber work), advising ondocuments, acting as a referee/arbitrator/mediator andcarrying out work properly incidental to the type of workreferred to above.
It is important that barristers ensureapplications for renewal of practisingcertificates are lodged in a timely fashion. Asclearly stated in the material accompanyingrenewal forms, applications can (and should)be lodged prior to securing professionalindemnity insurance cover although apractising certificate will not issue untilinsurance is secured.
• Communication with clients
As always, clear communication andprovision of quality service in all matters(whether instructed by a solicitor or actingdirectly) is likely to lead to fewermisunderstandings and, ultimately, to fewercomplaints. One area of particular concern isfailure to ensure terms of settlementaccurately reflect the agreement reachedbetween parties. Another is failure to ensurethat the effect of the terms of settlement isproperly explained to clients.
• Courtesy
Barristers should remain courteous at alltimes in their dealings with others includingclients, other barristers, solicitors, mediators,arbitrators and judicial officers.
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Professional Conduct Department - continued
• Conduct outside the practice of law
Last year’s annual report referred to a finding ofprofessional misconduct made by the AdministrativeDecisions Tribunal on 9 April 2002 against Richard Mitry,who does not presently hold a practising certificate as abarrister. The finding of professional misconduct followedon a conviction in 1996 when Mitry was found guilty ofbeing knowingly concerned in a company purchasing itsown shares, contrary to (then) sub-para 129(l)(i)(A) of theCompanies (NSW) Code. On 26 September 2002, thetribunal made orders that Mitry be publicly reprimanded,that the association not issue a practising certificate toMitry until he has satisfactorily completed the BarAssociation Reading Programme and Bar Practice Courseand that over the next two years, Mitry complete 20 hoursin each year of continuing legal education courses.
Two other cases investigated this year concerned themaking of multiple applications for shares in the publicfloat of a company. One of these has been referred to thetribunal and will be reported on in due course. Themajority of other cases relating to conduct outside thepractice of law involve the commission of tax offences andacts of bankruptcy.
• Acts of bankruptcy and tax offences
Investigation of notification matters has again continuedto occupy much of the department’s time. On someoccasions barristers have failed to cooperate with the BarCouncil in its investigation. This has included a failure torespond to statutory notices issued by the council requiringinformation from the barrister as to the facts andcircumstances surrounding the commission of the event(s).On two occasions this resulted in the council being unable tomake the necessary determination within the required threemonth period. In such cases a statutory suspension of thepractising certificate arises under sec 38FH of the Actpending certain avenues for re-issue.
The Act empowers the council to cancel, suspend, refuseto issue or attach conditions to practising certificates. At thebeginning of August 2003, 18 barristers held practisingcertificates which are subject to financial reportingconditions requiring the provision to the council ofquarterly reports from approved accountants in whosehands barristers have placed control of their financialaffairs, or reports from medical practitioners. The councilhas resolved, in such cases, that adequate provisioning forthe payment of tax (including GST) is a necessarycomponent of satisfactory control of financial affairs.
Fees Committee
During the year the Bar Association received 48 requeststo assist in the recovery from solicitors of unpaid fees,compared to 35 requests in the previous year. A total of$115,832 was recovered on behalf of members for thefinancial year ended 30 June 2003.
The basis upon which the association can assist inmembers’ fee recovery has been set out in an article entitled‘Changes in fee recovery assistance for members’ which isavailable on the association’s web site. Familiarity with thecosts disclosure provisions of Part 11 of the Act and theLegal Profession Regulation 1994 are an essential part of abarrister’s tools of trade.
The Bar Association has a panel of solicitors to whichmembers can be referred should the association’s efforts beunsuccessful in recovering fees from solicitors. The panelundertakes the fee recovery work for barristers at reducedrates. Enquiries can be made through Ms Adele Connor,Deputy Director, Professional Conduct.
Any enquiries about fee recovery or the operation ofPart 11 of the Act should be made in the first instance to Ms Connor. Greg McNally as the Fees Convenor, isconsulted about difficult matters. The Bar Association is, asalways, indebted to McNally for his continued assistance inthis area.
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Professional conduct statistics
TABLE 1 Notifications of offences and acts of bankruptcy made by barristers between 1 July 2002 and 30 June 2003 (compared to previous year)
2002-2003 2001-2002
Tax offences 8n 22*Acts of bankruptcy 14∞ 16Indictable offences 2 2Prescribed concentration of alcohol 4 4Traffic offences 0 5Other 4 3Fare evasion 0 4Non-notifiable events 0 4
Total 32# 60
n Of the eight notifications of tax offences, four barristers notified the Council of two tax offences. These have been treated as one notification of tax offences in each case.
* Of the 22 notifications of tax offences, 3 barristers notified the Council of two tax offences and one barrister notified the Council of three tax offences. These havebeen treated as one notification of tax offences in each case.
∞ Of the 14 notifications of acts of bankruptcy, one notified the Council of two acts of bankruptcy and four tax offences. This has been treated as one notification of anact of bankruptcy. Two barristers made two separate notifications on different dates each regarding a Creditor’s Petition and a Debtor’s Petition, one of whom alsomade a separate notification of a tax offence. These have been treated as separate notifications.
# In the 2002-2003 period, 29 barristers notified the Bar Council of offences and acts of bankruptcy. Of the 29 barristers, one barrister made two notifications ondifferent dates and one barrister made three notifications on different dates. These have been treated as separate notifications.
Table 2: Number of complaints received by complaint type between 1 July 2002 and 30 June 2003 (compared to previous year)
2002-2003 2001-2002
Complaint type
Acting contrary to/failure to carry out instructions 4 3Acting without instructions 1 1Breach of sec152 Legal Profession Act 1987 (LPA) 3 2Breach of undertaking 1 0Breach costs disclosure provisions Part 11 LPA 1 0Breach of Barristers’ Rule 35 (Clyne case) 0 2Breach of Barristers’ Rules 36 or 37 2 1Breach of Barristers’ Rule 74/75 (Barrister’s work) 0 2Breach of Barristers’ Rule (Other) 2 2Breach of confidentiality 1 1Conflict of interest 3 3Conspiracy to pervert course of justice 2 2Delay/failure to provide chamber work 3 1Failure to account 0 2Failure to advise properly or at all 1 3Failure to appear 1 5Failure to communicate 0 2Failure to conduct a fair hearing 2 1Failure to cross examine competently 0 1Failure to explain terms of settlement (properly or at all) 1 0Failure to prepare competently 0 2Failure to return briefs/client or other documents 0 5Other incompetence in legal practice 3 8Intoxicated when appearing or seeking to appear 0 2Misleading conduct/dishonesty 5 5Other unethical conduct 3 3Over zealous cross-examination (harranging a witness) 1 0Overcharging and/or over servicing 4 4Personal conduct 4 4Practising without a practising certificate 5 5Pressure to change plea/plead guilty 1 0Pressure to settle 0 3Rudeness/discourtesy 1 1
Total 55 76
Reports The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
Professional conduct statistics - continued
Table 3 Complaint received between 1 July 2002 and 30 June 2003 by complainant type (compared to previous year)
2002-2003 2001-2002
Bar Council 15 16Barrister 0 2Client/former client 17 36Government department/statutory law body 2 1Instructing solicitor 2 4Judicial/quasi judicial officer 1 0Legal Services Commissioner 4 2Opposing client 8 10Opposing solicitor 3 3Other 2 1Relative/friend 1 1Total 55 76
Table 4 Length of time complaints commenced between 1 July 2002 and 30 June 2003 have been and remain under investigation (compared to previous year)
2002-2003 2001-2002
Less than six months 22 35Between six and less than nine months 4 9Between nine and less than twelve months 8 4Total 34 48
Table 5 Result of investigations of complaints under Part 10 of the Legal Profession Act 1987 commenced andcompleted between 1 July 2002 and 30 June 2003 (compared to previous year)
2002-2003 2001-2002Result of investigation
Complaint under investigation 34 48Discontinued 0 0Withdrawn 3 4Dismiss - sec139(1)(a) 1 0Dismiss - sec155(4) 7# 17*Dismiss - sec155A 0 0Dismiss - sec155(3)(b) 4 0Refer to tribunal (prof misconduct) - sec155(2) 2 0Refer to tribunal (unsatis prof conduct/prof misconduct) - sec155(2) 0 0Reprimand - sec155(3)(a) 4 0Cancel practising certificate - sec37(1)(a) & (f) 0 0Appointment of independent investigator - sec151 0 6LSC close file 0 1n
Total 55 76
Table 6 Result of investigations of complaints under Part 10 of the Legal Profession Act 1987 carried forward or commenced and completed between 1 July 2002 and 30 June 2003 (compared to previous year)
2002-2003 2001-2002Result of investigation
Withdrawn 5 9Withdrawn but council initiated complaint under sec134(2) 1 0Dismiss - sec139(1)(a) 1 0Dismiss - sec155(3)(b) 4 0Dismiss - sec155(4) 33# 49*Dismissed with conditions attached to practising certificate - sec155(4) 1 0Dismiss - sec155A 0 2Refer to tribunal (professional misconduct) - sec155(2) 4 1Refer to tribunal (unsatisfactory professional conduct) - sec155(2) 0 0Refer to tribunal (unsats prof conduct/prof misconduct) - sec155(2) 2 5Reprimand - sec155(3)(a) 6 4Reprimand plus conditions on practising certificate - sec155(3)(a) 3 0No action required as barrister’s name removed from roll 1 0Suspended investigation - sec150 0 1Appointment of independent investigator - sec151 0 6LSC close file 0 1n
Total 61 78
48
# In the period 2002/2003, one decisionby the Bar Council to dismiss acomplaint pursuant to sec 155(4) wasthe subject of an application for reviewby the Legal Services Commissioner.This was not determined as at 30 June2003 and remains under review.
* In the period 2001-2002, one decisionby the Bar Council to dismiss acomplaint pursuant to sec 155(4) wasreviewed by the Legal ServicesCommissioner. The Bar Councildecision was upheld by thecommissioner under sec160(1)(a).
n The LSC directed the Bar Council toclose the file as there was no basis forthe complaint.
# In the period 2002/2003, fourdecisions by the Bar Council to dismissa complaint pursuant to sec 155(4)were reviewed by the Legal ServicesCommissioner. All four Bar Councildecisions were upheld by thecommissioner under sec 160(1)(a). Twofurther decisions remain under reviewby the Legal Services Commissioner.
* In the period 2001/2002, fourdecisions by the Bar Council to dismissa complaint pursuant to sec155(4) werereviewed by the Legal ServicesCommissioner. All four Bar Councildecisions were upheld by thecommissioner under sec 160(1)(a).
n The LSC directed the Bar Council toclose the file as there was no basis forthe complaint.
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New South Wales Bar Associationfinancial statements
Directors’ report 50
Independent auditors’ report 52
Directors’ declaration 53
Statement of financial performance 54
Statement of financial position 55
Statement of cash flows 56
Notes to the financial statements 57
Emerton Endowment Fund 67
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The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
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Directors’ report
The directors present their report together with the financial report of The New South Wales Bar Association (‘the company’)for the year ended 30 June 2003 and the auditors’ report thereon.
DirectorsThe directors of the company at any time during or since the financial year are:
Period as director
B W Walker SC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 November 1992 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentI G Harrison SC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 December 1997 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentT Bathurst QC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 November 2001 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentM J Slattery QC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 November 1999 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentA J Katzmann SC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 November 1993 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentB A Coles QC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 November 2000 . . . . . . to . . . . . presentJ T Gleeson SC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 November 1999 . . . . . . to . . . . . 14 November 2002J P Gormly SC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 November 1996 . . . . . . to . . . . 14 November 2002L King SC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 November 2001 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentG C Lindsay SC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 November 2002 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentJ J Fernon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 November 1999 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentK M Traill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 December 1997 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentH J Marshall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 November 2000 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentA P Stenmark . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 November 2000 . . . . . . to . . . . . 14 November 2002R Sofroniou . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 November 2000 . . . . . . to . . . . . 14 November 2002R Pepper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 November 2000 . . . . . . to . . . . . 14 November 2002H Kelly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 November 2001 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentM Elkaim . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 November 2001 . . . . . . to . . . . . 14 November 2002S Torrington . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 November 2001 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentC Loukas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 November 2001 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentM McHugh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 November 2001 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentD Toomey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 November 2001 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentA S Bell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 November 2002 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentR A Cavanagh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 November 2002 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentV J Lydiard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 November 2002 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentJ W J Stevenson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 November 2002 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . presentR S Toner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 November 2002 . . . . . . to . . . . . . . . . . . . present
Principal activitiesThe principal activities of the company during the course of the financial year were to conduct the affairs of The New South
Wales Bar Association and to operate The New South Wales Bar Association Library.
There were no significant changes in the nature of these activities during the financial year.
Review and results of operationsThe company continued to engage in its principal activity during the financial year.
The net profit of the company for the year ended 30 June 2003 was $316,146 (2002: net loss $166,956). This resultrepresents a $483,102 increase in net profit from the prior year and is chiefly attributable to increasing revenues fromordinary activities.
DividendsNo dividends were paid during the year and no recommendation is made as to dividends as dividends are forbidden by the
Constitution.
State of affairsNo significant changes in the state of affairs of the company occurred during the financial year.
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Directors’ report - continued
Events subsequent to balance dateNo matters or circumstances have arisen since the end of the financial year which significantly affect the operations of the
company, the results of those operations, or the state of affairs of the company in financial years subsequent to the financialyear ended 30 June 2003.
Likely developmentsThe company will endeavour to pursue its principal activities at a surplus. Its ability to do so may be adversely affected by
regulatory changes, including changes to the practising certificate fee structure, and a decline in subscriptions from ananticipated diminution in the number of practising barristers.
Information on directorsAttendance at Number of meetings
Name Position council meetings while director held office
Walker SC Bret William President 22 23Harrison SC Ian Gordon Senior Vice President 22 23Slattery QC, Michael John Junior Vice President 20 23Bathurst QC, Tom Treasurer 18 23Loukas, Chrissa Secretary (from 14.11.02) 18 23Gormly, Jeremy Patrick Secretary (until 14.11.02) 3 10Coles QC, Bernard Anthony John Director 20 23King SC Larry Director 18 23Katzmann SC Anna Judith Director 20 23Gleeson SC Justin Thomas Director 8 10Lindsay SC Geoffrey Charles Director 13 13Kelly, Hayden Director 18 23Elkaim, Michael Director 10 10Torrington, Stuart Director 14 23Stenmark, Alison Patricia Director 7 10Fernon, John Director 18 23Marshall, Hugh Joseph Director 18 23Traill, Kate Director 20 23Sofroniou, Rena Director 7 10Pepper, Rachel Director 7 10McHugh, Michael Director 20 23Toomey, Dominic Director 22 23Bell, Andrew Scott Director 8 13Cavanagh, Richard Austin Director 9 13Lydiard, Virginia Joan Director 13 13Stevenson, James William John Director 11 13Toner, Robert Stephen Director 12 13
From 1 July 2002 to 30 June 2003 there were 23 meetings.
Environmental regulationThe company is not subject to any significant environmental regulations under Australian law.
Signed in accordance with a resolution of the directors
BW Walker T BathurstPresident Treasurer
Dated at Sydney this 28th day of August 2003
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
52
Independent auditors’ report to the members of The New South Wales Bar AssociationScope
We have audited the financial report of The New South Wales Bar Association for the financial year ended 30 June 2003set out on pages 53 to 67. The company’s directors are responsible for the financial report. We have conducted an independentaudit of this financial report in order to express an opinion to the members of the company.
Our audit has been conducted in accordance with Australian Auditing Standards to provide reasonable assurance whetherthe financial report is free of material misstatement. Our procedures included examination, on a test basis, of evidencesupporting the amounts and other disclosures in the financial report, and the evaluation of accounting policies and significantaccounting estimates. These procedures have been undertaken to form an opinion whether, in all material respects, thefinancial report is presented fairly in accordance with Accounting Standards and other mandatory professional reportingrequirements and statutory requirements in Australia so as to present a view which is consistent with our understanding of thecompany’s financial position, and performance as represented by the results of its operations and its cash flows.
The audit opinion expressed in this report has been formed on the above basis.
Audit opinionIn our opinion, the financial report of The New South Wales Bar Association is in accordance with:
a the Corporations Act 2001, including:
i giving a true and fair view of the company’s financial position as at 30 June 2003 and of its performance for the yearended on that date; and
ii complying with Accounting Standards and the Corporations Regulations 2001; and
b other mandatory professional reporting requirements in Australia.
Court & Co Stuart H CameronChartered Accountants Partner
Dated at Sydney this 28th day of August 2003
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
53
Directors’ declaration
In the opinion of the directors of The New South Wales Bar Association:
a the financial statements and notes set out on pages 54 to 67 are in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001, including:
i giving a true and fair view of the financial position of the company as at 30 June 2003 and of its performance, as represented by the results of its operations and its cash flows, for the year ended on that date; and
ii complying with Accounting Standards and the Corporations Regulations 2001; and
b there are reasonable grounds to believe that the company will be able to pay its debts as and when they become due and payable.
Signed in accordance with a resolution of the directors:
B W Walker T BathurstPresident Treasurer
Dated at Sydney this 28th day of August 2003
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
54
Statement of financial performanceFor the year ended 30 June 2003
Note 2003 2002 $ $
Revenue from sale of goods 3 129,536 156,183
Other revenue from ordinary activities 3 5,654,799 5,075,538
TOTAL REVENUE 3 5,784,335 5,231,721
Purchases 97,000 115,217
Employee expenses 2,352,243 2,029,535
Legal and professional fees 1,168,421 1,208,447
Subscriptions 377,280 343,038
Communications and information technology expenses 220,354 202,990
Depreciation and amortisation expenses 4 220,631 312,390
Occupancy expenses 295,164 272,267
Advertising and marketing expenses 157,665 260,328
Financial expenses 100,778 97,011
Borrowing costs 859 -
Other expenses from ordinary activities 477,794 557,454
Profit/(Loss) from ordinary activities before related income tax expense 316,146 (166,956)
Income tax expense relating to ordinary activities 5 - -
NET PROFIT/(LOSS) 14 316,146 (166,956)
TOTAL CHANGE IN MEMBER FUNDS 14 316,146 (166,956)
The accompanying notes form part of these financial statements.
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
55
Statement of financial positionFor the year ended 30 June 2003
Note 2003 2002 $ $
CURRENT ASSETS
Cash assets 17(i) 6,206,402 5,183,823
Receivables 7 375,397 727,276
Inventories 25,089 26,195
Other assets 8 174,447 135,516
TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS 6,781,335 6,072,810
NON-CURRENT ASSETS
Other financial assets 6 183,539 214,949
Plant and equipment 9 626,050 706,144
TOTAL NON-CURRENT ASSETS 809,589 921,093
TOTAL ASSETS 7,590,924 6,993,903
CURRENT LIABILITIES
Payables 10 589,252 794,467
Provisions 11 182,918 104,642
Interest bearing liabilities 12 12,252 -
Other liabilities 13 3,443,622 3,095,581
TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES 4,228,044 3,994,690
NON-CURRENT LIABILITIES
Provisions 11 272,240 247,262
Interest bearing liabilities 12 22,543 -
TOTAL NON-CURRENT LIABILITIES 294,783 247,262
TOTAL LIABILITIES 4,522,827 4,241,952
NET ASSETS 3,068,097 2,751,951
MEMBERS’ FUNDS
Retained surplus 14 3,068,097 2,751,951
TOTAL MEMBERS’ FUNDS 3,068,097 2,751,951
The accompanying notes form part of these financial statements.
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
56
Statement of cash flowsFor the year ended 30 June 2003
Note 2003 2002 CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES $ $
Cash receipts in the course of operations 6,586,782 5,838,184
Cash payments in the course of operations (5,701,027) (5,530,374)
Dividends received 4,941 4,366
Interest received 206,638 135,045
Borrowing costs (64) -
Net cash provided by operating activities 17(ii) 1,097,270 447,221
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Payment for plant and equipment (108,323) (115,090)
Proceeds from sale of plant and equipment 2,455 200
Payment for marketable securities (2,115) (1,924)
Proceeds from the sale of shares 292 4,583
Proceeds on redemption of investments 33,000 33,000
Net cash used in investing activities (74,691) (79,231)
NET INCREASE IN CASH HELD 1,022,579 367,990
Cash at the beginning of the financial year 5,183,823 4,815,833
CASH AT THE END OF THE FINANCIAL YEAR 17(i) 6,206,402 5,183,823
The accompanying notes form part of these financial statements.
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
57
Notes for the financial statementsFor the year ended 30 June 2003
1. STATEMENT OF ACCOUNTING POLICIES
The significant policies which have been adopted in the preparation of this financial report are:
a Basis of preparation
The financial report is a general purpose financial report which has been prepared in accordance with AccountingStandards, Urgent Issues Group Consensus Views, other authoritative pronouncements of the Australian AccountingStandards Board and the Corporations Act 2001.
It has been prepared on the basis of historical costs and except where stated, does not take into account changing moneyvalues or current valuations of non-current assets.
These accounting policies have been consistently applied by the company and, except where there is a change inaccounting policy, are consistent with those of the previous year.
b Income tax
The company has adopted the liability method of tax effect accounting.
In addition, under the mutuality provisions of the Income Tax Assessment Act, income and expenses wholly applicableto members of the company are not brought to account for the purposes of calculating income for tax purposes.
c Inventories
Inventories are valued at the lower of cost or net realisable value. Cost is determined on a weighted average basis.
d Acquisitions of assets
All assets acquired including plant and equipment are initially recorded at their cost of acquisition at the date ofacquisition, being the fair value of the consideration provided plus incidental costs directly attributable to theacquisition.
e Operating leases
Payments made under operating leases are expensed on a straight line basis over the term of the lease except where analternative basis is more representative of the pattern of benefits to be derived from the leased property.
f Receivables
Receivables to be settled within 30 days are carried at amounts due. The collectibility of debts is assessed at balance dateand specific provision is made for any doubtful accounts.
g Payables
Liabilities are recognised for amounts to be paid in the future for goods or services received. Trade accounts payable arenormally settled within 30 days.
h Employee benefits
Wages, salaries and annual leave
Liabilities for employee benefits for wages and salaries, and annual leave expected to be settled within 12 months of thereporting date representing present obligations resulting from employees’ services provided up to reporting date, andare calculated at undiscounted amounts based on remuneration wage and salary rates that the company expects to payas at reporting date including related on-costs.
Superannuation plan
The company contributes to a number of defined contribution employee superannuation plans. Contributions arecharged against income as they are made.
i Investments
Investments are carried in the company’s financial statements at the lower of cost or recoverable amount.
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
58
Notes for the financial statements - continued
For the year ended 30 June 2003
j Revenue recognition
Revenues are recognised at fair value of the consideration received net of the amount of goods and services tax (GST).Exchanges of goods or services of the same nature and value without any cash consideration are not recognised asrevenues.
Subscriptions and practising certificate fees
Subscriptions and practising certificate fees comprise annual fees for membership of the Bar Association and practisingcertificates. Subscriptions and practising certificate fees are recognised on a pro rata basis through the course of theyear.
Sales of goods
Sales of goods comprises revenue earned from the provision of products to parties outside the company. Revenue derivedfrom the sale of goods is recognised when the products are provided.
Proceeds on sale of plant and equipment
The gross proceeds of asset sales are included as revenue of the company. The profit or loss on sale of assets is broughtto account at the date an unconditional contract of sale is agreed.
Administration charge
Administration charge comprise revenue earned from the provision of administrative services. They are recognised whenthe fee in respect of services is receivable.
Dividends received
Revenue from dividends is recognised when the dividend is receivable.
Interest income
Interest income is recognised as it accrues.
Grants
Grants comprise monies received during the year in respect of the professional conduct department and legal assistancedepartment. Income is recognised when the grant is receivable.
Other income
Income from other sources is recognised when the fee in respect of other products or services provided is receivable.
k Goods and Services Tax
Revenues, expenses and assets are recognised net of the amount of goods and services tax (GST), except where theamount of GST incurred is not recoverable from the Australian Taxation Office (ATO). In these circumstances the GSTis recognised as part of the cost of acquisition of the asset or as part of an item of the expense.
Receivables and payables are stated with the amount of GST included.
The net amount of GST recoverable from, or payable to, the ATO is included as a current asset or liability in thestatement of financial position.
Cash flows are included in the statement of cash flows on a gross basis. The GST components of cash flows arising frominvesting and financing activities which are recoverable from, or payable to, the ATO are classified as operating cashflows.
l Recoverable amount of non-current assets valued on cost basis
The carrying amounts of non-current assets valued on the cost basis are reviewed to determine whether they are in excessof their recoverable amount at balance date. If the carrying amount of a non-current assets exceeds its recoverableamount, the asset is written down to the lower amount. The write-down is recognised as an expense in the net profit orloss in the reporting period in which it occurs.
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
59
Notes for the financial statements - continued
For the year ended 30 June 2003
m Depreciation and amortisation
Useful lives
All plant and equipment have limited useful lives and are depreciated/amortised using the straight line method over theirestimated useful lives.
Assets are depreciated or amortised from the date of acquisition.
Depreciation and amortisation rates and methods are reviewed annually for appropriateness. When changes are made,adjustments are reflected prospectively in current and future periods only. Depreciation and amortisation are expensed.
The depreciation/amortisation rates used for each class of asset are as follows:
Depreciation rate Depreciation method
2003 2002
Library 5% 5% Straight line
Refurbishment 10-34% 10-34% Straight line
Furniture, computers, office machines
and equipment 10-33% 10-33% Straight line
Glasses, bar and kitchen equipment 20% 20-33% Straight line
2. MEMBERS’ GUARANTEE
The company is limited by guarantee. If the company is wound up, the Constitution states that each member is required tocontribute to meet all outstanding obligations of the company such amounts as may be required, but not exceeding $4.
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
60
Notes for the financial statements - continued
For the year ended 30 June 2003
2003 2002$ $
3. REVENUE FROM ORDINARY ACTIVITIES
Sale of goods revenue from operating activities 129,536 156,183
Other revenues
From operating activitiesSubscriptions and practising certificate fees 3,332,463 2,950,320
Reading programme 240,092 183,853
Interest and dividends 209,539 179,681
Seminars 26,918 53,080
Administration charge 85,150 75,200
External funding 1,580,176 1,400,866
Proceeds on sale of fixed assets 2,455 200
Proceeds on sale of investments 292 -
Other revenue 164,024 203,238
From outside operating activities
Rent 13,690 29,100
Total revenue from ordinary activities 5,784,335 5,231,721
2003 2002$ $
4. PROFIT/(LOSS) FROM ORDINARY ACTIVITIES BEFORE INCOME TAX EXPENSE
Profit/(Loss) from ordinary activities before income tax expense
has been arrived at after charging/(crediting) the following items.
Amortisation 88,963 146,432
Depreciation of plant and equipment 131,668 165,958
Auditors’ remuneration:
. Audit 23,379 22,000
. Other services 7,081 11,754
Net expense from movements in provision for:
. Employee benefits 103,254 31,637
. Bad debts - (7,247)
Profit on sale of plant and equipment (669) (200)
Cost of goods sold 96,999 115,217
Dividends received - other parties (4,941) (4,366)
Interest received - other parties (204,598) (175,315)
Rent (13,690) (29,100)
(Profit)/Loss on sale of investments (233) 36
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
61
Notes for the financial statements - continued
For the year ended 30 June 2003
2003 2002$ $
5. INCOME TAX EXPENSE
Prima facie income tax expense/(benefit) calculated at30% on the profit/(loss) from ordinary activities 94,844 (50,087)
Increase/decrease in income tax expense/(benefit) due to:
. Net mutual income (103,263) (47,361)
(8,419) (97,448)
Deferred tax asset not brought to account 8,419 97,448
Income tax expense relating to ordinary activities - -
A deferred tax asset arising from tax losses of $54,885 (2202: $48,250) has not been recognised as an asset because recoveryis not virtually certain. The benefit for tax losses will only be obtained of:
i. the company derives future assessable income of a nature and an amount sufficient to enable the benefit from thedeductions for the losses to be realised.
ii. the company continues to comply with the conditions for deductibility imposed by tax legislation; and
iii.no changes in tax legislation adversely affect the company in realising the benefit from the deductions for the losses.
6. OTHER FINANCIAL ASSETS
2003 2002$ $
Non-current
Investments in other entities
Listed shares and notes at cost 183,535 214,945
(Market value: $217,663, 2002: $247,666)
Investments in associates
Unlisted at cost 4 4
183,539 214,949
7. RECEIVABLES
Current
Debtors 320,866 649,141
Net GST receivable 54,531 78,135
375,397 727,276
8. OTHER ASSETS
Current
Prepayments 136,217 95,246
Accrued interest 38,230 40,270
174,447 135,516
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
62
Notes for the financial statements - continued
For the year ended 30 June 2003
2003 2002$ $
9. PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
Non-currentOwned assetsLibrary - at cost 469,043 469,043Less: Accumulated depreciation (46,906) (23,454)
422,137 445,589
Refurbishment - at cost 1,251,542 1,207,930Less: Accumulated amortisation (1,211,639) (1,122,675)
39,903 85,255
Furniture, computers, office machines and equipment - at cost 1,113,614 1,014,903Less: accumulated depreciation (951,311) (844,848)
162,303 170,055
Glasses, bar and kitchen equipment - at cost 12,984 33,877Less: accumulated depreciation (11,277) (28,632)
1,707 5,245
626,050 706,144
ReconciliationsReconciliations of the carrying amounts for each class of plant and equipment are set out below:
Library Carrying amount at beginning of year 445,589 469,043Additions - -Disposals - -Depreciation (23,452) (23,454)
Carrying amount at end of year 422,137 445,589
RefurbishmentCarrying amount at beginning of year 85,255 231,687Additions 43,611 -Disposals - -Amortisation (88,963) (146,432)
Carrying amount at end of year 39,903 85,255
Furniture, computers, office machines and equipmentCarrying amount at beginning of year 170,055 192,985Additions 98,712 119,072Disposals - (3,982)Depreciation (106,464) (138,020)
Carrying amount at end of year 162,303 170,055
Glasses, bar and kitchen equipmentCarrying amount at beginning of year 5,245 9,729Additions - -Disposals (1,786) -Depreciation (1,752) (4,484)
Carrying amount at end of year 1,707 5,245
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
63
Notes for the financial statements- continued
For the year ended 30 June 2003
2003 2002$ $
10. PAYABLES
Current
Sundry creditors and accrued charges 589,252 794,467
11. PROVISIONS
Current
Employee benefits provision 182,918 104,642
Non-current
Employee benefits provision 97,221 72,243
Contingencies 175,019 175,019
272,240 247,262
Number of employees No. No.
Number of employees at year end 29 29
12. INTEREST BEARING LIABILITIES
Current
Loan liability 12,252 -
Non-current
Loan liability 22,543 -
34,795 -
13. OTHER LIABILITIES
Current
Subscriptions and practising certificate fees received in advance 3,443,622 3,095,581
14. RETAINED SURPLUS
Retained surplus at beginning of year 2,751,951 2,918,907
Net profit/(loss) 316,146 (166,956)
Retained surplus at end of year 3,068,097 2,751,951
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
64
Notes for the financial statements - continued
For the year ended 30 June 2003
2003 2002$ $
15. LEASE COMMITMENTS
Lease of premises
Current year rent expense 166,176 150,000
Operating lease commitments payable
Not later than one year 231,051 83,496
Later than one year but not later than five years 400,800 19,824
631,851 103,320
16. RELATED PARTY DISCLOSURES
a. The New South Wales Bar Association has a receivable, being an administration fee from the Barristers’ Sicknessand Accident Fund 1961 of $70,000 on normal commercial terms and conditions.The company paid rent of $166,176 to Counsel’s Chambers Limited for its office space on normal commercial termsand conditions.
During the year, some members of the Bar Council attended conferences and meetings on behalf of The New SouthWales Bar Association held overseas, as well as in New South Wales regional centres and interstate. Certain travel andaccommodation expenses were paid by the company.
Pursuant to a Bar Council resolution, part of the President’s secretarial and other sundry expenses are borne by theassociation.
b. The names of the persons who were directors of the company during the financial year were as follows:
B W Walker SC
I G Harrison SC
H J Marshall
A P Stenmark
T Bathurst QC
R Sofroniou
M J Slattery QC
R Pepper
A J Katzmann SC
M Elkaim
B A Coles QC
J T Gleeson SC
L King SC
S Torrington
D Toomey
J Fernon
G C Lindsay SC
A S Bell
H Kelly
R A Cavanagh
M McHugh
V J Lydiard
J P Gormly
J W J Stevenson
K M Traill
R S Toner
C T Loukas
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
65
Notes for the financial statements - continued
For the year ended 30 June 2003
17. NOTES TO THE STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
i For the purposes of the statement of cash flows, cash includes cash on hand and in banks. Cash at the end of the financialyear as shown in the statement of cash flows is reconciled to the related items in the statement of financial position asfollows:
2003 2002$ $
Current account 6,166,075 5,134,456
Barristers’ fighting fund 39,077 48,267
Petty cash 1,250 1,100
6,206,402 5,183,823
ii Reconciliation of net profit/(loss) to net cash provided by operating activities
Net profit/(loss) 316,146 (166,956)
Amortisation 88,963 146,432
Depreciation 131,668 165,958
Profit on sale of plant and equipment (669) (200)
Loss on sale of investments 233 36
Net cash provided by operating activities before changes in assets and liabilities 536,341 145,270
Changes in assets and liabilities:
Decrease/(increase) in receivables 328,275 (468,065)
Decrease in inventories 1,106 4,100
Increase in prepayments (40,971) (62,840)
Increase in accrued interest 2,040 -
(Decrease)/increase in sundry creditors (205,215) 293,355
Increase in provisions 103,254 31,637
Increase in subscriptions and practising certificate fees received in advance 348,041 532,502
Decrease/(increase) in net GST receivable 23,604 (28,738)
Increase in interest bearing liabilities 795 -
Net cash provided by operating activities 1,097,270 447,221
Note (iii) - Non-cash financing activities
During the financial year, the Association acquired plant and equipment with an aggregate fair value of $34,000 by meansof entering into a loan. The acquisition is not reflected in the statement of cash flows.
18. SUPERANNUATION
The company contributes to several defined contribution employee superannuation funds. The company contributesto the funds in accordance with its statutory obligations.
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
66
Notes for the financial statements - continued
For the year ended 30 June 2003
19. ADDITIONAL FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS DISCLOSURE
a Interest rate risk
Interest rate risk exposures
The company’s exposure to interest rate risk and the effective weighted average interest rate for classes of financial assetsand financial liabilities is set out below:
FIXED INTEREST MATURING IN
Note Weighted Floating 1 Year or Over 1 to Non-interest Totalaverage interest less 5 years bearing
interest rate rate2003 $ $ $ $ $
Financial assets
Cash assets 17(i) 4.10% 6,205,152 - - 1,250 6,206,402
Receivables 7 - - - - 375,397 375,397
Other financial assets 6 - - - - 183,539 183,539
Financial liabilities
Payables 10 - - - - 589,252 589,252
Interest bearing liabilities 12 5.00% - 12,252 22,543 - 34,795
Financial assets
Cash assets 17(i) 4.21% 5,182,723 - - 1,100 5,183,823
Receivables 7 - - - - 727,276 727,276
Other financial assets 6 - - - - 214,949 214,949
Financial liabilities
Payables 10 - - - - 794,467 794,467
Interest bearing liabilities 12 - - - - - -
b Net fair values of financial assets and liabilities
The carrying amounts and net fair values of financial assets and liabilities as at the reporting date are as follows:
2003 2003 2002 2002Carrying Net fair Carrying Net fairamount value amount value
$ $ $ $
Financial assets
Cash assets 6,206,402 6,206,402 5,183,823 5,183,823
Receivables 375,397 375,397 727,276 727,276
Other financial assets
Shares in other corporations
- listed 183,535 217,663 214,945 247,666
- unlisted 4 4 4 4
Financial liabilities
Payables 589,252 589,252 794,467 794,467
Interest bearing liabilities 34,795 34,795 - -
The listed shares in other corporations are readily traded on organised markets in a standardised form. All other financialassets and liabilities are not readily traded on organised markets in a standardised form.
The New South Wales Bar Association Annual Report 2003
67
Emerton Endowment Fund
Statement of financial positionas at 30 June 2003
2003 2002$ $
CURRENT ASSETS
Cash assets 119,376 103,836
Other assets - 21
TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS 119,376 103,857
NON-CURRENT ASSETS
Investments - Shares in companies listed on a prescribed stock exchange
(Market value $175,572; 2002 $180,470):
- at cost 122,216 117,995
TOTAL NON-CURRENT ASSETS 122,216 117,995
TOTAL ASSETS 241,592 221,852
CURRENT LIABILITIES
Payables - related party 9,071 -
TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES 9,071 -
TOTAL LIABILITIES 9,071 -
NET ASSETS 232,521 221,852
CAPITAL 204,374 204,374
RESERVES
Retained surplus 28,147 17,478
TOTAL DEFICIT IN FUNDS 232,521 221,852
INCOME
Dividends received - other parties 7,046 6,604
Interest received - other parties 3,623 6,962
Profit on sale of investments - 3,912
TOTAL INCOME 10,669 17,478
NET PROFIT 10,669 17,478
Retained surplus at the beginning of the financial year 17,478 -
RETAINED SURPLUS AT THE END OF THE FINANCIAL YEAR 28,147 17,478
Barristers’ Benevolent Association of NSW Annual Report 2003
68
Barristers’ Benevolent Association of NSWABN: 18 466 736 745
Financial report for the year ended 30 June 2003
Statement from the Committee of Management 69
Independent auditors’ report 69
Detailed statement of financial performance 70
Statement of financial performance 70
Statement of financial position 71
Statement of cash flows 72
Notes to the financial statements 73
Barristers’ Benevolent Association of NSW Annual Report 2003
69
Statement from the Committee of ManagementFor the year ended 30 June 2003
In the opinion of the trustees the financial statements set out on pages 70 to 74 are drawn up so as to present fairly theresults of the Barristers’ Benevolent Association for the year ended 30 June 2003 and the state of affairs of the associationas at that date.
BW Walker T Bathurst
For the Committee of Management For the Committee of Management
Dated at Sydney this 28th day of August 2003
Independent auditors’ report to the members of Barristers’ Benevolent Association of NSW
Scope
I have audited the financial report of the Barristers Benevolent Association of NSW for the year ended 30 June 2003 set outon pages 70 to 74. The association’s officers are responsible for the financial report. I have conducted an independent auditof this financial report in order to express an opinion on them to the members of the association.
My audit has been conducted in accordance with Australian Auditing Standards to provide reasonable assurance as to whetherthe financial report is free of material misstatement. My procedures included examination, on a test basis, of evidencesupporting the amounts and other disclosures in the financial report, and the evaluation of accounting policies and significantaccounting estimates. These procedures have been undertaken to form an opinion as to whether, in all material respects, thefinancial report is presented fairly in accordance with Accounting Standards and other mandatory professional reportingrequirements and statutory requirements in Australia so as to present a view which is consistent with my understanding of theassociation’s financial position and its performance, as represented by the results of its operations.
The audit opinion expressed in this report has been formed on the above basis.
Audit opinion
In our opinion the financial statements, consisting of the statement of financial performance, the statement of financialposition and notes to the financial statements present fairly the financial position of the association and its performance forthe year ended 30 June 2003 in accordance with Accounting Standards and other mandatory professional reportingrequirements in Australia.
Court & Co Stuart H Cameron
Chartered Accountants Partner
Dated at Sydney this 28th day of August 2003
Barristers’ Benevolent Association of NSW Annual Report 2003
70
Detailed statement of financial performanceFor the year ended 30 June 2003
Statement of financial performanceFor the year ended 30 June 2003
2003 2002 $ $
INCOME
Contributions 109,890 95,971
Distribution income 43,877 53,543
Interest income 11,469 13,166
Sundry income - 2,597
165,236 165,277
EXPENDITURE
Audit and accountancy 5,437 5,500
Debt waiver 15,000 50,000
Bank charges - 71
Gifts 106,655 88,900
Legal fees - 18,302
BarCare costs 1,878 3,093
Diminution in value of investments 89,739 98,785
218,709 264,651
LOSS FROM ORDINARY ACTIVITIES (53,473) (99,374)
Note 2003 2002 $ $
Other revenues from ordinary activities 165,236 165,277
Total revenue 165,236 165,277
Other expenses from ordinary activities 218,709 264,651
NET LOSS (53,473) (99,374)
TOTAL CHANGE IN EQUITY 6 (53,473) (99,374)
The accompanying notes form part of these financial statements.
Barristers’ Benevolent Association of NSW Annual Report 2003
71
Statement of financial positionas at 30 June 2003
Note 2003 2002 $ $
MEMBERS FUNDS
Trust funds 1,061,760 1,061,760
Capital profits reserve 2 1,006,432 962,555
Accumulated surplus 6 (182,620) (85,270)
1,885,572 1,939,045
CURRENT ASSETS
Cash assets 3 207,133 241,969
Receivables 4 233,623 205,899
TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS 440,756 447,868
NON-CURRENT ASSETS
Investments 5 1,449,316 1,495,177
TOTAL NON-CURRENT ASSETS 1,449,316 1,495,177
TOTAL ASSETS 1,890,072 1,943,045
NET ASSETS 1,885,572 1,939,045
CURRENT LIABILITIES
Provisions 4,500 4,000
TOTAL LIABILITIES 4,500 4,000
The accompanying notes form part of these financial statements.
Barristers’ Benevolent Association of NSW Annual Report 2003
72
Statement of cash flowsFor the year ended 30 June 2003
Note 2003 2002 $ $
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Cash receipts 148,746 151,108
Interest received 11,469 13,166
Cash payments (119,151) (116,893)
Net cash provided by operating activities 7(ii) 41,064 47,381
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Advances repaid during year 20,500 24,600
Loans advanced during year (52,523) (24,337)
Payments for units in investment fund (43,877) (113,543)
Net cash used in investing activities (75,900) (113,280)
NET DECREASE IN CASH HELD (34,836) (65,899)
Cash at the beginning of the financial year 241,969 307,868
CASH AT THE END OF THE FINANCIAL YEAR 7(i) 207,133 241,969
Barristers’ Benevolent Association of NSW Annual Report 2003
73
Notes to the financial statementsFor the year ended 30 June 2003
1. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
a Basis of peparationThe financial report is a general purpose financial report which has been prepared in accordance with AccountingStandards, Urgent Issues Group Consensus Views and other authoritative pronouncements of the Australian AccountingStandards Board.
It has been prepared on an accruals basis. It is based on historical costs and does not take into account changing moneyvalues, or, except where specifically stated, current valuations of non-current assets.
The accounting policies have been consistently applied by the Barristers’ Benevolent Association and, except wherethere is a change in accounting policy, are consistent with those of the previous year.
Where necessary, comparative information has been reclassified to achieve consistency in disclosure with currentfinancial year amounts and other disclosures.
b Measurement of investmentsInvestments are brought to account at the lower of cost or recoverable amount. The carrying amount of investments isreviewed annually by directors to ensure they are not in excess of the recoverable amount of these investments.
c Income taxThe association is exempt from income tax.
d ReceivablesReceivables to be settled within 30 days are carried at amounts due. The collectibility of debts is assessed at balance dateand specific provision is made for any doubtful accounts.
e Revenue recognitionContributions
Revenue from contributions is recognised when the contribution is received.
Distribution income
Revenue from distributions is recognised when the distribution is receivable.
Interest income
Interest income is recognised as it accrues.
Other income
Income from other sources is recognised when the income is receivable.
f Goods and Services TaxRevenues, expenses and assets are recognised net of the amount of goods and services tax (GST), except where theamount of GST incurred is not recoverable from the Australian Taxation Office (ATO). In these circumstances, the GSTis recognised as part of the cost of acquisition of the asset or as part of an item of the expense.
Receivables and payables are stated with the amount of GST included.
The net amount of GST recoverable from, or payable to, the ATO is included as a current asset or liability in thestatement of financial position.
Cash flows are included in the statement of cash flows on a gross basis. The GST components of cash flows arising from investing and financing activities which are recoverable from, or payable to, the ATO are classified as operatingcash flows.
2. MOVEMENT IN RESERVES2003 2002
$ $
Capital profits reserve
Opening balance for the year 962,555 909,012
Transfer from accumulated surplus 43,877 53,543
Balance as at 30 June 2003 1,006,432 962,555
Barristers’ Benevolent Association of NSW Annual Report 2003
74
Notes to the financial statements - continued
For the year ended 30 June 2003
2003 2002 $ $
3. CASH ASSETSCurrentCash at bank 24,400 4,896Cash on deposit 182,733 237,073
207,133 241,969
4. RECEIVABLESCurrent NSW Bar Association 87,822 76,690Interest free loans 145,710 128,688GST receivable 91 521
233,623 205,899
5. INVESTMENTSNon-currentInvestments in unit trusts and commonfunds 1,449,316 1,495,177(Market value does not differ from cost)
6. ACCUMULATED SURPLUSAccumulated (deficit)/surplus at the beginning of the year (85,270) 67,647Net loss (53,473) (99,374)Amount transferred to reserves (43,877) (53,543)
Accumulated deficit at the end of the year (182,620) (85,270)
7. NOTES TO THE STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
i. For the purposes of the statement of cash flows, cash includes cash at bank and cash on deposit.
Cash at the end of the financial year as shown in the statement of cash flows is reconciled to the related items in thestatement of financial position as follows:
2003 2002$ $
Cash at bank 24,400 4,896Cash on deposit 182,733 237,073
207,133 241,969
ii. Reconciliation of net loss to net cash provided by operating activities
Net loss (53,473) (99,374)Bad debts 10,000 50,000Donations received 5,000 -
Changes in assets and liabilities:Decrease in investments 89,738 98,785Increase in amounts owing from NSW Bar Association (11,132) (4,441)Increase in other receivables 431 911Increase in provision 500 1,500
Net cash provided by operating activities 41,064 47,381
Barristers’ Superannuation Fund Annual Report 2003
75
The Barristers’ Superannuation Fund
The Barristers’ Superannuation Fund is a public offer superannuation fund governed by a Trust Deed dated 24 May 1957(as amended from time to time) under which the Trustee of the fund holds the assets in trust for the members and theirdependants. The fund is also regulated by the Superannuation Industry (SIS) Act 1993. The fund’s ABN is 23 921 476 227.
The fund is an accumulation style fund which also offers members choice of four investment options, Growth, Balanced,Conservative Balanced or Cash. The lump sum benefit a member is entitled to receive at any given time is based on the numberof units standing to his or her credit in the relevant investment option and the unit price applicable to that option at the time.
Membership of the fund is open to barristers practising in New South Wales and the spouses of current members.
The Trustee of the fund is Permanent Trustee Company Limited (ACN 000 000 993) and Aon Consulting Pty Limited isresponsible for the administration of the fund.
Features of the Fund
• Costs are spread over a membership of 255 NSW barristers and the fund’s assets are in excess of $30 million
• Low administration costs - under 0.48 per cent of assets
• Convenient, efficient service, with the administrator in attendance in Counsels’ Chambers on the last few days of thefinancial year to accept contributions, membership applications and investment choice switches
• Choice of four investment options, Growth, Balanced, Conservative Balanced or Cash
• Member’s individual investment in the fund can be split between the four options, in any proportion.
• Flexible death and total and permanent disablement insurance inside the Fund is both tax effective and cost effective atgroup rates
• Direct representation through the Policy Committee representing members.
• Security of a professional, independent Trustee, Permanent Trustee Company Limited, and Trust Deed amendmentsrequiring the approval of the Council of the New South Wales Bar Association.
Highlights for the Year Ended 30 June 2003
Membership as at 30 June 2003 255
Total contributions received for the year 1,980,391
Net assets as at 30 June 2003 $30,328,000
Fund Benchmark*
Growth earning rate -2.9% -4.0%
Balanced earning rate 0.5% -2.2%
Conservative balanced earning rate 0.6% 0.9%
Cash earning rate 3.6% 5%
*Please note: benchmark returns are based on underlying asset class relevant index returns, gross of fees and tax.
Fund accounts as at 30 June 2003
Each year a general purpose financial report is prepared by the Trustee and audited by the fund’s auditor. Abridgedfinancial information consistent with the draft unaudited accounts for the year ended 30 June 2003 is included below. Thedraft accounts have been reviewed by the auditor and no material changes are expected.
Barrister’s Superannuation Funf Annual Report 2003
76
Statement of financial position
2002 2003
INVESTMENTS
MLC Growth Fund 13,877,742 12,998,554
Maple-Brown Abbott PST 4,550,965 4,584,224
MLC Managed Cash Fund 6,184,674 6,090,345
Invesco Growth Fund 3,551,519 4,376,146
MLC Balanced Fund 1,203,913 940,389
Total investments 29,368,813 28,989,658
OTHER ASSETS
Cash at bank 1,817,203 1,168,067
Contributions receivable 106,405 214,000
Other assets 10,494 353,016
Total assets 31,302,915 30,724,741
LIABILITIES
Benefits payable 0 186,758
Other amounts payable 29,390 214,328
Provision for income tax 190,049 (4,477)
TOTAL LIABILITIES 219,439 396,609
Net assets available to pay benefits 31,083,476 30,328,132
Operating statement for the year ended 30 June
2002 2003
Opening balance at 1 July 31,504,891 31,083,476
Net investment revenue (985,034) (212,559)
Contributions 2,213,486 1,980,391
Transfers 3,445 108,638
Total income 1,231,897 1,876,470
Benefits paid 1,085,667 2,128,470
Administrative costs 119,915 137,551
Insurance premiums 30,934 18,017
Surcharge tax 178,888 132,103
Income tax expense 237,908 215,673
Total expenditure 1,653,312 2,631,814
Net assets at 30 June 31,083,476 30,328,132
The New South Wales Bar Association
Selborne Chambers 174 Phillip Street, Sydney 2000Ph : + 61 2 9232 4055 Fax : + 61 2 9221 11499www.nswbar.asn.au